From bmathis at directedge.com Wed Jul 4 22:49:58 2001 From: bmathis at directedge.com (Brian Mathis) Date: Thu Aug 5 00:19:30 2004 Subject: [roch-pm] [Fwd: Perl.com Newsletter: People Behind Perl] Message-ID: <3B43E3E6.4070401@directedge.com> -------- Original Message -------- Subject: Perl.com Newsletter: People Behind Perl Date: Tue, 3 Jul 2001 14:44:09 -0700 From: Perl Newsletter To: "Perl Newsletter" www.perl.com update -------------------------------------- The Email for www.perl.com Subscribers ============================================================== The 3rd O'Reilly Open Source Convention, July 23-27, 2001 Sheraton San Diego Hotel and Marina Fueling the Open Source Alternative The Perl Conference 5, XTech2001 Conference on XML (in association with GCA), the 8th Tcl/Tk Conference, the 1st Conference on PHP - 14 tracks keep you informed on the latest innovations - http://conferences.oreilly.com/oscon/ ============================================================== Hello, world. This is Simon Cozens, www.perl.com managing editor, bringing you the latest goings on from the world of Perl and our own site. * Perl at large. Well, it looks like I've been making the news this week with the language-dev list, so maybe I should tell you about that... Remember Parrot, the April Fool's Joke, where I had Perl and Python joining forces to create a new language? Well, there was a serious side to that little prank. I recognised that the developer communities in both languages came up against the same problems and discussed a lot of the same issues; this would become especially important as people started developing Perl 6 and Python 3000. As a result, I set up the language-dev mailing list to encourage collaboration between programming language implementors. See the whole story on my weblog: http://www.oreillynet.com/cs/weblog/view/wlg/440 And speaking of Perl 6, the development marches onwards, with the near finalisation of another Perl Design Document. Unfortunately, we're not able to bring you another Apocalypse from Larry at the moment, as he's still having problems with his health and now networking problems are adding to the misery, but it'll be along soon - be assured that we'll bring it to you as soon as we have it! http://archive.develooper.com/perl6-internals%40perl.org/msg03260.html Finally, Sun is running a survey on its Solaris Developer Connection web site asking which language people use for "web-based client applications", whatever they may be. At point of writing, Perl is blowing away the opposition with 51.4%, with JSP (16%) and PHP (10%) the closest competitors. This may, however, have something to do with the poll being posted to use.perl... http://use.perl.org/article.pl?sid=01/07/02/1225218&mode=thread&threshold= * What's new on www.perl.com? The Perl 5 Porters summary this week is back in my own hands, and features developments in module organisation and testing, a summary of Robin's fantastic work on B::Deparse, fixes and suggestions for Carp, Jeffrey Friedl's amazingly interesting regexp patch, as well as work on IBM 390 and UTS platforms and much, much more... http://www.perl.com/pub/a/2001/07/p5pdigest/20010702.html Bryan Warnock continues his fantastic work summarizing the Perl 6 mailing lists. As last week was not very busy, this summary covers the past fortnight, and brings talk of multiple inheritance, internal string APIs, and the astonishing fact that Perl doesn't suck after all. http://www.perl.com/pub/a/2001/07/p6pdigest/20010703.html This week, we begin a new series on perl.com; we're bringing you interviews with the "People Behind Perl" - some of the people from the legions of developers and supporters that do all the behind-the-scenes work to make Perl the invaluable tool we've come to expect. This week, I talk to Nathan Torkington, long-time Perl developer, co-author of the Perl Cookbook and, more recently, Perl 6 project manager. http://www.perl.com/pub/a/2001/07/03/nat.html Enjoy! SC ============================================================== Sponsored by Macromedia, Creators of ColdFusion Problems meeting tight deadlines? ColdFusion 4.5, the leading Web app server, has the solution with an integrated suite of visual tools, powerful server technology, and an open language environment. Download your FREE evaluation copy today at http://www.oreillynet.com/nlr/network/04/allaire/coldfusion ============================================================== *** This Week's Features *** People Behind Perl: Nathan Torkington So you use Perl, and you probably know that it was brought to you by "Larry Wall and a cast of thousands". But do you know these people that make up the Perl development team? Simon Cozens talks to Nathan Torkington, a long-time Perl developer and a mainstay of the Perl community. http://www.perl.com/pub/a/2001/07/03/nat.html *** Why Not Translate Perl to C? Mark-Jason Dominus explains why it might not be any faster to convert your code to a C program rather than let the Perl interpreter execute it. http://www.perl.com/pub/a/2001/06/27/ctoperl.html *** Yet Another YAPC Report::Montreal Schuyler Erle gives a detailed report of all the exciting events at this year's Yet Another Perl Conference in Montreal. By his account, it appears to be an exciting time to be involved with the development of Perl. http://www.perl.com/pub/a/2001/06/21/yapcreport.html *** Parse::RecDescent Tutorial Parse::RecDescent is a recursive descent parser generator designed to help Perl programmers who need to deal with any sort of structured data, from configuration files to mail headers to almost anything. It's even been used to parse other programming languages for conversion to Perl. Jeff Goff explains what Parse::RecDescent does, how to build up grammars, and how to use Parse::RecDescent in your programs. http://www.perl.com/pub/a/2001/06/13/recdecent.html Sister Sites: --------------------------------- O'Reilly Network http://www.oreillynet.com The Source for Open and Emerging Technologies. XML.com http://xml.com/ XML from the Inside Out. ONLamp.com http://onlamp.com O'Reilly Network's High-Performance Web Development Site. O'Reilly and Associates http://www.oreilly.com/ O'Reilly computer books, software, and online publishing. ----------------------------------------------------------------- If you want to cancel a subscription to this newsletter, send an email to perl-unsubscribe@paprika.oreillynet.com NOTE: Please make certain to unsubscribe from the email address at which you receive this message For non-automated human help email elists-admin@oreillynet.com ----------------------------------------------------------------- -- Brian Mathis Direct Edge http://www.directedge.com -- For information on unsubscribing from this list, please visit http://rochester.pm.org From William.Redman at westgroup.com Fri Jul 6 13:29:01 2001 From: William.Redman at westgroup.com (Redman, William) Date: Thu Aug 5 00:19:30 2004 Subject: [roch-pm] How to make Win32 Registry Queries from Unix Message-ID: I am looking for a way to query the Win32 Registry for information. Specifically, I want to determine if I can collect printer information from the registry to distribute among the Unix servers we have. I have looked into the CPAN site, and found the Win32 modules. The queries I would like to initiate from the Unix side. Thanks. =======================================+==================================== ====== William D. Redman | Lead Systems Engineer | "Simple obedience is simple, Technical Support Services | complex obedience is complex". | The Aqueduct Building | 50 Broad Street | Rochester, New York 14694 | ph: 716.546.5530 x3197 | fx: 716.327.2704 | email: william.redman@westgroup.com | =======================================+==================================== ====== -- For information on unsubscribing from this list, please visit http://rochester.pm.org From dkalweit at nesfiles.com Fri Jul 6 15:32:18 2001 From: dkalweit at nesfiles.com (Derek J. Kalweit) Date: Thu Aug 5 00:19:30 2004 Subject: [roch-pm] How to make Win32 Registry Queries from Unix Message-ID: How about writing a simple COM component with an ASP front-end that wraps the Registry API in ATL? Or maybe an ISAPI DLL to do the same thing(instead of ASP). Are these JUST queries, or writing as well? -----Original Message----- From: Redman, William Sent: Fri 7/6/2001 2:29 PM To: Cc: Subject: [roch-pm] How to make Win32 Registry Queries from Unix I am looking for a way to query the Win32 Registry for information. Specifically, I want to determine if I can collect printer information from the registry to distribute among the Unix servers we have. I have looked into the CPAN site, and found the Win32 modules. The queries I would like to initiate from the Unix side. Thanks. =======================================+================================ ==== ====== William D. Redman | Lead Systems Engineer | "Simple obedience is simple, Technical Support Services | complex obedience is complex". | The Aqueduct Building | 50 Broad Street | Rochester, New York 14694 | ph: 716.546.5530 x3197 | fx: 716.327.2704 | email: william.redman@westgroup.com | =======================================+================================ ==== ====== -- For information on unsubscribing from this list, please visit http://rochester.pm.org -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: not available Type: application/ms-tnef Size: 5970 bytes Desc: not available Url : http://mail.pm.org/archives/rochester-pm/attachments/20010706/c9cc6b67/attachment.bin From bmathis at directedge.com Sun Jul 8 22:35:27 2001 From: bmathis at directedge.com (Brian Mathis) Date: Thu Aug 5 00:19:30 2004 Subject: [roch-pm] How to make Win32 Registry Queries from Unix References: Message-ID: <3B49267F.6020809@directedge.com> Redman, William wrote: > I am looking for a way to query the Win32 Registry for information. > Specifically, > I want to determine if I can collect printer information from the registry > to > distribute among the Unix servers we have. > > I have looked into the CPAN site, and found the Win32 modules. The queries I > would like > to initiate from the Unix side. > > Thanks. For some of our machines at work we have an 'rsh' service running on the NT box. Once that's there, you can remotely execute anything you want on the machine, like a perl script or something to query the printers :) -- Brian Mathis Direct Edge http://www.directedge.com -- For information on unsubscribing from this list, please visit http://rochester.pm.org From bmathis at directedge.com Tue Jul 10 20:55:46 2001 From: bmathis at directedge.com (Brian Mathis) Date: Thu Aug 5 00:19:30 2004 Subject: [roch-pm] [Fwd: [Perl Jobs] Experienced Perl / CGI developers needed for tellecommute contracts (telecommute), United States] Message-ID: <3B4BB222.3060307@directedge.com> Online URL for this job: http://jobs.perl.org/job/44 Posted: July 10, 2001 Job title: Experienced Perl / CGI developers needed for tellecommute contracts Location: United States Pay rate: D.O.E. Travel: 0% Terms of employment: Independent contractor (project-based) Hours: Flexible Onsite: no Description: I am in need of one or more experienced Perl programmers interested in telecommuting positions on a part-time basis. Could lead to full-time position for the right person(s) with dependable programmers receiving advances and bonuses. (s) will be based in the U.S.A., have at least 1 year of CGI experience and should be familiar with Object Oriented Perl and OO module use and creation. HTML and MySQL experience is also required. Projects range from (but are not limited to) content and member management to e-commerce and database applications. **Clean, commented, maintainable coding is a must.** Required skills: Perl (min. 1 year CGI experience) OO Perl (must be familiar with OO module use) DBI MySQL HTML Desired skills: The following are a plus but not required: Javascript/DHTML C/C++ PHP Linux/Apache Solaris Windows (IIS, NT, 2000, MSSQL) ASP/VB/VBScript/JScript Contact information: Contact Rich < rich@21cws.com > with a summary of your experience. If possible, please include links to code samples and examples of previous work. -- Brian Mathis Direct Edge http://www.directedge.com -- For information on unsubscribing from this list, please visit http://rochester.pm.org From bmathis at directedge.com Wed Jul 11 19:24:27 2001 From: bmathis at directedge.com (Brian Mathis) Date: Thu Aug 5 00:19:30 2004 Subject: [roch-pm] [Fwd: Perl.com Newsletter: Symmetric Cryptography in Perl] Message-ID: <3B4CEE3B.8000302@directedge.com> www.perl.com update -------------------------------------- The Email for www.perl.com Subscribers ================================================================= Sponsored by NuSphere NuSphere MySQL Advantage delivers Enhanced MySQL to run your business. Row-level locking, ACID transactions, crash recovery and more are supplied by Gemini, a new MySQL table type that provides the performance, scalability and reliability required by the most demanding applications. Get the NuSphere MySQL Advantage today. Visit http://www.nusphere.com/op ================================================================== Hello, world! This is Simon Cozens, managing editor of www.perl.com, here to bring you the week's news and developments both in the Perl world and on our own site. * Perl at large. Happy news this week from the Perl Journal - it'll now be published by CMP Media, the owner of Dr. Dobb's, Sys Admin and many other fine publications. Jon Orwant will still be working for TPJ, as Senior Contributing Editor, and subscribers will be getting new issues of TPJ - and there are rumours that we'll be getting free monthly copies of Sys Admin magazine - from this fall. Read the whole story: http://www.samag.com/tpj/ Ask Bjorn Hansen, perl.org's tireless administrator, has come up with another useful tool: you can now read all the perl.org mailing lists via NNTP by connecting with your newsread to nntp.perl.org. (That's for those of you who don't do it yourself using Mail::Audit and News::Gateway, of course. :) ActiveState has released another issue of the ActiveCD, which contains all of their software - including trial editions of Visual Perl, Visual Python and Visual XSLT, the Microsoft Visual Studio plug-ins, as well as the complete Perl and Python package repositories. http://www.activestate.com/ASPN/Downloads/ActiveCD/ I also hear on the grapevine that ActiveState will be releasing 1.1 of their Komodo IDE for Linux in the near future. We're hoping to give you a review of Komodo when it comes out. Chris Nandor, the MacPerl porter, has been a very busy man recently; he's released the third alpha version of MacPerl 5.6.1. This actually contains many of the modules integrated into the 5.7.x series of Perl, so you're actually getting a sneak preview of 5.8.0. Get it, compile it, test it, and tell Chris about any bugs: http://macperl.sourceforge.net/ With only two weeks to go for the Perl Conference, presenters are putting the finishing touches on their talks and tutorials; (and I get ready to fly out...) the guys over at YAPC::Europe, on the other hand, have released the schedule for their August conference in Amsterdam. The theme is security, but there's a lot of other interesting things going on there: http://conferences.oreilly.com/perl/ http://www.yapc.org/Europe/schedule.html And finally... Casey West has issued the final Call For Comedy for his perl5-porters impressions BOF at the Perl Conference. Think you can be a more convincing me than I can? Step right up: http://archive.develooper.com/perl5-porters%40perl.org/msg60315.html * What's new on www.perl.com? The perl5-porters summary is here as usual, bringing you the latest on the scheduling of 5.7.2 and 5.8.0, new modules in the core, numeric hacking, PerlIO, how to do asynchronous callbacks, and much more: http://www.perl.com/pub/a/2001/07/p5pdigest/20010709.html Now, what do you think of when you hear the word "cryptography"? Big expensive computers? Men in black helicopters? PGP or GPG encrypting your mail? Maybe you don't think of Perl. Well, Abhijit Menon-Sen says you should. He's the author of a bunch of the Crypt:: modules, and he explains how to use Perl to keep your secrets... secret. http://www.perl.com/pub/a/2001/07/10/crypto.html Enjoy, and the next we meet, I shall be in Boston travelling down to TPC. Hope to see you there! SC ============================================================ The 3rd O'Reilly Open Source Convention, July 23-27, 2001 Sheraton San Diego Hotel and Marina Fueling the Open Source Alternative DON'T MISS The Great Open Source Debate--Microsoft and Red Hat square off in this hot keynote and panel discussion featuring Clay Shirky, Dave Stutz, Tim O'Reilly and more http://conferences.oreillynet.com/cs/os2001/view/e_sess/1834 Register now to guarantee your participation http://conferences.oreilly.com/oscon/ ============================================================ *** This Week's Features *** Symmetric Cryptography in Perl Abhijit Menon-Sen explains how to use Perl to keep your secrets... secret http://www.perl.com/pub/a/2001/07/10/crypto.html *** Creating Scalable Vector Graphics with Perl >From XML.com Kip Hampton demonstrates how to use Perl, XML, and SVG to generate useful and attractive graphics dynamically. http://xml.com/pub/a/2001/07/11/creatingsvg.html *** People Behind Perl: Nathan Torkington So you use Perl, and you probably know that it was brought to you by "Larry Wall and a cast of thousands". But do you know these people that make up the Perl development team? Simon Cozens talks to Nathan Torkington, a long-time Perl developer and a mainstay of the Perl community. http://www.perl.com/pub/a/2001/07/03/nat.html *** Why Not Translate Perl to C? Mark-Jason Dominus explains why it might not be any faster to convert your code to a C program rather than let the Perl interpreter execute it. http://www.perl.com/pub/a/2001/06/27/ctoperl.html =============================================================== Sponsored by Macromedia, Creators of ColdFusion Problems meeting tight deadlines? ColdFusion 4.5, the leading Web app server, has the solution with an integrated suite of visual tools, powerful server technology, and an open language environment. Download your FREE evaluation copy today at http://www.oreillynet.com/nlr/network/04/allaire/coldfusion =============================================================== Sister Sites: --------------------------------- O'Reilly Network http://www.oreillynet.com The Source for Open and Emerging Technologies. XML.com http://xml.com/ XML from the Inside Out. ONLamp.com http://onlamp.com O'Reilly Network's High-Performance Web Development Site. O'Reilly and Associates http://www.oreilly.com/ O'Reilly computer books, software, and online publishing. ----------------------------------------------------------------- If you want to cancel a subscription to this newsletter, send an email to perl-unsubscribe@paprika.oreillynet.com NOTE: Please make certain to unsubscribe from the email address at which you receive this message For non-automated human help email elists-admin@oreillynet.com ----------------------------------------------------------------- -- Brian Mathis Direct Edge http://www.directedge.com -- For information on unsubscribing from this list, please visit http://rochester.pm.org From bmathis at directedge.com Sun Jul 15 21:13:45 2001 From: bmathis at directedge.com (Brian Mathis) Date: Thu Aug 5 00:19:30 2004 Subject: [roch-pm] No meeting this week Message-ID: <3B524DD9.4030507@directedge.com> Hello everyone, Under the normal schedule, we would be having a meeting this Wednesday. Unfortunately, the usual meeting place is not available this month, so the meeting is cancelled. Have some fun and get outside in this wonderful weather! Unless someone has a suggestion? -- Brian Mathis Direct Edge http://www.directedge.com -- For information on unsubscribing from this list, please visit http://rochester.pm.org From bmathis at directedge.com Mon Jul 16 12:07:03 2001 From: bmathis at directedge.com (Brian Mathis) Date: Thu Aug 5 00:19:30 2004 Subject: [roch-pm] [Perl Jobs] Perl/Shell programmer | Freelance (telecommute), Canada, ON, Toronto (fwd) Message-ID: Online URL for this job: http://jobs.perl.org/job/51 To subscribe to this list, send mail to jobs-subscribe@perl.org. To unsubscribe, send mail to jobs-subscribe@perl.org. Posted: July 16, 2001 Job title: Perl/Shell programmer | Freelance Company name: 3BAGSMEDIA Location: Canada, ON, Toronto Pay rate: negotiable Travel: 0% Terms of employment: Independent contractor (project-based) Length of employment: short Hours: Flexible Onsite: no Description: Requires either A) a new Perl script to validate and store data from a web-based survey B) work with an existing Shell script to accomplish the same task. Very small project. Very small budget. Very easy people to work with. : ) Required skills: Perl/Shell programming Desired skills: a fast perfectionist would do the trick Contact information: -- Phillip Smith 3BAGSMEDIA INC T 416.925.6221 x229 F 416.925.3459 phillip@3bags.com -- For information on unsubscribing from this list, please visit http://rochester.pm.org From bmathis at directedge.com Thu Jul 19 13:32:26 2001 From: bmathis at directedge.com (Brian Mathis) Date: Thu Aug 5 00:19:30 2004 Subject: [roch-pm] Perl.com Newsletter: Mail::Audit module (fwd) Message-ID: www.perl.com update -------------------------------------- The Email for www.perl.com Subscribers ============================================================= Sponsored by WebEvent Low Cost, Scaleable Web-Calendaring Add calendaring and scheduling to your Websites beginning at a one-time fee of just $150! WebEvent is the world leader in web-based calendar software, with a 96% customer approval rating. Access to source code makes the software customizable, and it is compatible with all major operating systems. Try it free for 15 days at www.WebEvent.com/cs/r?perl1. ============================================================= Greetings, Starfighter!^WPerl hacker! This is Schuyler Erle, web hacker for the O'Reilly Network, and it's my pleasure and honor to bring you the week's news and developments both on www.perl.com, and all across the world of Perl. * Perl at large. Perl 5.7.2 is out! As reported in last week's perl5-porters summary, Jarkko had announced that 5.7.2 was on its way. This past Friday, Jarkko officially released Perl 5.7.2 to CPAN. You can get it from: http://www.cpan.org/src/perl-5.7.2.tar.gz This is a development release, not to be used for production systems! However, you might consider this an early release candidate for Perl 5.8.0, the next stable release, as little is expected to change between now and then. Congrats to Jarkko and all the perl5-porters. Meanwhile, our own Joe Johnston has written a nifty new article for oreilly.com, on using Perl in the brave new world of web services. Joe is co-author of _Programming Web Services with XML-RPC_, which was published last month by O'Reilly & Associates, and contains several chapters devoted to Perl's XML-RPC facilities. If you're not familiar with the promise of XML-RPC and web services, I strongly encourage you to take a peek at Joe's article: http://web.oreilly.com/news/xmlrpc_0701.html The big news this week, however, is the last-minute preparations for The Perl Conference 5, with just under a week to go before the world's brightest and best Perl hackers descend on the Sheraton San Diego Hotel; will we see you there? Editor emeritus Mark-Jason Dominus will be hosting another of his wildly popular Lightning Talk sessions. You can find the tentative schedule of this year's rapid-fire five-minute talks at: http://perl.plover.com/lt/tpc2001.html Also, some of this year's Birds-of-a-Feather sessions have been announced. There are quite a few BOF meetings being led by our friends from ActiveState on a wide variety of topic, a couple by Chris Nandor on Slash and on MacPerl, and one simply entitled "Something Interesting Dominus Is Working On". However, the one I'm really looking forward to is the Jam BOF, hosted by Nat Torkington on Wednesday night. Bring your musical instruments! (Also, keep your eyes peeled for the Wireless BOF, which, although not as yet listed on the schedule, I mention because I'll be co-hosting it with the O'Reilly Network's own Rob Flickenger. ;-) You can check out the whole list of scheduled events at: http://conferences.oreillynet.com/cs/os2001/pub/10/bofs.html * What's new on www.perl.com? Once again, Simon Cozens is back in the saddle with another irreverent edition of the perl5-porters digest. This week, flames roar over SUPER:: operating at compile time vs. run time; "package;" goes away, and Artur Bergman sets out to fix threading and chew gum, only to discover that he's all out of gum. http://www.perl.com/pub/a/2001/07/p5pdigest/20010716.html As if that wasn't enough, Simon also presents our feature article this week, on his Mail::Audit module, which is a head-on attempt to address the agony of filtering e-mail with procmail. "I didn't want to handle my mail with a collection of ... commands that made sendmail.cf look like a Shakespearean sonnet," Simon writes, referring to procmail's obtuse recipe syntax. "I wanted to program my mail routing in a nice, high-level language. Something like Perl, for instance." Intrigued? Come see how Mail::Audit can be put to work sorting your mail! http://www.perl.com/pub/a/2001/07/17/mailfiltering.html Thanks for joining us this week, noble Perl hackers. We'll be back again next week, live from The Perl Conference in San Diego. Hope to see you there! SDE =============================================================== The 3rd O'Reilly Open Source Convention, July 23-27, 2001 Sheraton San Diego Hotel and Marina FINAL WEEK! -- GNOME's Miguel de Icaza reveals Mono http://conferences.oreillynet.com/cs/os2001/view/e_sess/1917 Register now for The Great Open Source Debate, Perl Conference 5, PHP, XML, Python, Java -16 technology tracks in all--http://conferences.oreilly.com/oscon/ =============================================================== *** Featured Articles *** Mail Filtering with Mail::Audit >From Perl.com Does your e-mail still get dumped into a single Inbox because you haven't taken the time to figure out the incantations required to make procmail work? Simon Cozens shows how you can easily write mail filters in something you already know: Perl. http://www.perl.com/pub/a/2001/07/17/mailfiltering.html *** This Week on p5p 2001/07/16 >From Perl.com Description 5.7.2 is out, some threading fixes, and much more. http://www.perl.com/pub/a/2001/07/p5pdigest/20010716.html *** Symmetric Cryptography in Perl >From Perl.com Abhijit Menon-Sen explains how to use Perl to keep your secrets... secret. http://www.perl.com/pub/a/2001/07/10/crypto.html *** Creating Scalable Vector Graphics with Perl >From XML.com Kip Hampton demonstrates how to use Perl, XML, and SVG to generate useful and attractive graphics dynamically. http://www.xml.com/pub/a/2001/07/11/creatingsvg.html *** People Behind Perl: Nathan Torkington >From Perl.com So you use Perl, and you probably know that it was brought to you by "Larry Wall and a cast of thousands". But do you know these people that make up the Perl development team? Simon Cozens talks to Nathan Torkington, a long-time Perl developer and a mainstay of the Perl community. http://www.perl.com/pub/a/2001/07/03/nat.html Sister Sites: --------------------------------- O'Reilly Network http://www.oreillynet.com The Source for Open and Emerging Technologies. XML.com http://xml.com/ XML from the Inside Out. ONLamp.com http://onlamp.com O'Reilly Network's High-Performance Web Development Site. O'Reilly and Associates http://www.oreilly.com/ O'Reilly computer books, software, and online publishing. ----------------------------------------------------------------- If you want to cancel a subscription to this newsletter, send an email to perl-unsubscribe@paprika.oreillynet.com NOTE: Please make certain to unsubscribe from the email address at which you receive this message For non-automated human help email elists-admin@oreillynet.com ----------------------------------------------------------------- -- For information on unsubscribing from this list, please visit http://rochester.pm.org From anthony.whyte at kodak.com Mon Jul 23 12:16:24 2001 From: anthony.whyte at kodak.com (Tony Whyte) Date: Thu Aug 5 00:19:30 2004 Subject: [roch-pm] [Fwd: Linux KDE Desktop Training] Message-ID: <3B5C5BE8.67836B47@kodak.com> Perlers, Schools in for summer... read on if your into Linux If attachment gets garbed the number is 716-546-6390 at www.annexa.com (Moist towelettes included) Tony -------------- next part -------------- An embedded message was scrubbed... From: Thomas Bond Subject: Linux KDE Desktop Training Date: Mon, 23 Jul 2001 09:40:04 -0400 Size: 26173 Url: http://mail.pm.org/archives/rochester-pm/attachments/20010723/baf1d8e7/attachment.eml From bmathis at directedge.com Thu Jul 26 23:43:20 2001 From: bmathis at directedge.com (Brian Mathis) Date: Thu Aug 5 00:19:30 2004 Subject: [roch-pm] [Fwd: Perl.com Newsletter: Larry Wall's State of the Onion] Message-ID: <3B60F168.6060506@directedge.com> www.perl.com update -------------------------------------- The Email for www.perl.com Subscribers ================================================================= Sponsored by WebEvent Low Cost, Scaleable Web-Calendaring Add calendaring and scheduling to your Websites beginning at a one-time fee of just $150! WebEvent is the world leader in web-based calendar software, with a 96% customer approval rating. Access to source code makes the software customizable, and it is compatible with all major operating systems. Try it free for 15 days at www.WebEvent.com/cs/r?perl2. ================================================================= Hello, world! This is Simon Cozens, managing editor of www.perl.com, here to bring you the week's news and developments both in the Perl world and on our own site. * Perl at large. The Perl Conference is upon us! As I write this, Dan Sugalski is preparing to give his talk on the Perl 6 internals. The major focus of the conference has been the future status of Perl, and especially Perl 6; Larry's State of the Onion talk - or should I say, talks, since there were 33 of them - set out an overview of what Perl 6 would look like. The perl.com team was there, and we've put together the highlights into an article: http://www.perl.com/pub/a/2001/07/25/onion.html We've been having too much fun to bring you as much coverage of the conference as we'd like, but you can always get the very latest from my weblog, including my report of day one of the conference: http://www.oreillynet.com/weblogs/Cozens http://www.oreillynet.com/cs/weblog/view/wlg/503 Also checkout the photos and other coverage of the conference on: http://www.oreillynet.com/oscon2001/ There've also been some awards. First, the technical awards: Brian Ingerson and Neil Watkiss won Best New Module for Inline; Dan Brian won the Damian Conway Award for his papers on linguistics, and Mark-Jason Dominus won the Larry Wall Award for Utility for his paper "Rx, a Regex Debugger for Perl." Second, the coveted White Camel Awards for contributions to the Perl community: David Adler, for his work with the Perl Mongers; Ask Hansen, for his tireless and dedicated work administering the perl.org web sites and mailing lists; and the YAPC::Europe organizing committee for, well, YAPC::Europe. Away from the conference, we ought to remind you of the Perl Journal's poetry contest deadline. As regular readers will know, the Perl Journal has gone through a takeover by CMP, and they wish to continue the contest. The deadline has been extended to Friday the 27th (tomorrow) at 5pm Pacific Time. See the URL for the details: http://perlguy.com/contest.html The perl.com team are all here at the conference, so what we've been doing this week has mainly been based around that. Normal service will be resumed next week when we all get home; we have some very interesting articles lined up for you, but right now, it's time to get back to the talks! SC ================================================================= Sponsored by NuSphere NuSphere MySQL Advantage delivers Enhanced MySQL to run your business. Row-level locking, ACID transactions, crash recovery and more are supplied by Gemini, a new MySQL table type that provides the performance, scalability and reliability required by the most demanding applications. Get the NuSphere MySQL Advantage today. Visit http://www.nusphere.com/op ================================================================== *** Featured Articles *** The State of the Onion 5 Larry Wall gives his annual summary of the state of the Perl world. This year, as one might expect, the major focus was on Perl 6. Larry gave 33 lightning talks, of 55 seconds each, outlining elements of Perl 6's design. Here's a rundown on what Perl 6 is going to be. http://www.perl.com/pub/a/2001/07/25/onion.html *** Mail Filtering with Mail::Audit Does your e-mail still get dumped into a single Inbox because you haven't taken the time to figure out the incantations required to make procmail work? Simon Cozens shows how you can easily write mail filters in something you already know: Perl. http://www.perl.com/pub/a/2001/07/17/mailfiltering.html *** This Week on p5p 2001/07/16 Description 5.7.2 is out, some threading fixes, and much more. http://www.perl.com/pub/a/2001/07/p5pdigest/20010716.html *** Symmetric Cryptography in Perl Abhijit Menon-Sen explains how to use Perl to keep your secrets... secret. http://www.perl.com/pub/a/2001/07/10/crypto.html Sister Sites: --------------------------------- O'Reilly Network http://www.oreillynet.com The Source for Open and Emerging Technologies. XML.com http://xml.com/ XML from the Inside Out. ONLamp.com http://onlamp.com O'Reilly Network's High-Performance Web Development Site. O'Reilly and Associates http://www.oreilly.com/ O'Reilly computer books, software, and online publishing. ----------------------------------------------------------------- If you want to cancel a subscription to this newsletter, send an email to perl-unsubscribe@paprika.oreillynet.com NOTE: Please make certain to unsubscribe from the email address at which you receive this message For non-automated human help email elists-admin@oreillynet.com ----------------------------------------------------------------- -- Brian Mathis Direct Edge http://www.directedge.com -- For information on unsubscribing from this list, please visit http://rochester.pm.org From bmathis at directedge.com Mon Jul 30 21:37:02 2001 From: bmathis at directedge.com (Brian Mathis) Date: Thu Aug 5 00:19:30 2004 Subject: [roch-pm] [Fwd: [Perl Jobs] mod_perl/MySQL perl hacker (telecommute), United States, n/a, n/a] Message-ID: <3B6619CE.40302@directedge.com> -------- Original Message -------- Subject: [Perl Jobs] mod_perl/MySQL perl hacker (telecommute), United States, n/a, n/a Date: 30 Jul 2001 20:18:23 -0000 From: Perl Jobs To: jobs@perl.org Online URL for this job: http://jobs.perl.org/job/64 To subscribe to this list, send mail to jobs-subscribe@perl.org. To unsubscribe, send mail to jobs-unsubscribe@perl.org. Posted: July 29, 2001 Job title: mod_perl/MySQL perl hacker Company name: NetMark Intl. Location: United States, n/a, n/a Pay rate: DOE Travel: 0% Terms of employment: Salaried employee Hours: Full time Onsite: no Description: Experienced perl hacker needed. Must have proven ability to develop complex web applications which are tightly integrated with Apache and MySQL in a Linux environment. Must want to make really good money all while working from home. Must have strong desire to see lots of dust collect on that "business casual" work attire. Required skills: * Perl - Must have at least 2 years experience (on the job) * bash - You must know what this is and how to use it. * mysql - You should know SQL very well. More particularly MySQL. * mod_perl/Apache - You must have written mod_perl before, and I'm _NOT_ talking about Apache::Registry.. (That's cheating :)) * Exceptional programming skills, Good communication, Timely and efficient code production - these should go without saying.. Desired skills: * Some [UNIX] system administration work would be nice. * The ability to do backflips on command would be cool. * Experience with MLM or Direct Marketing companies is a plus. Contact information: Adam Erickson adam@recruitomatic.com -- Brian Mathis Direct Edge http://www.directedge.com -- For information on unsubscribing from this list, please visit http://rochester.pm.org