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comp.lang.ruby

Mobile (Cellular) programming libraries?

chuckmcknight@gmail.com

5/29/2007 10:21:00 PM

Hi All,

Is anyone currently working on anything to implement WAP Push, SMPP,
etc. as a set of Ruby libraries?

Thanks!

Chuck

8 Answers

Enrique Comba Riepenhausen

5/29/2007 10:45:00 PM

0

On 30 May 2007, at 00:25, chuckmcknight@gmail.com wrote:

> Hi All,
>
> Is anyone currently working on anything to implement WAP Push, SMPP,
> etc. as a set of Ruby libraries?
>
> Thanks!
>
> Chuck

Hi Chuck!

We are currently working on Rannel (http://rannel.rub...).
Rannel is for the moment an interface (offer libraries) to access
Kannel, the open source WAP/SMS Gateway. We plan into the future to
implement the SMPP stack into Rannel, so to eliminate the need of a
Kannel installation.

Cheers

----
Enrique Comba Riepenhausen
ecomba@mac.com

I always thought Smalltalk would beat Java, I just didn't know it
would be called 'Ruby' when it did.
-- Kent Beck


James Tucker

5/31/2007 10:05:00 AM

0

chuckmcknight@gmail.com wrote:
> Hi All,
>
> Is anyone currently working on anything to implement WAP Push, SMPP,
> etc. as a set of Ruby libraries?
>
> Thanks!
>
> Chuck
>
>
>
Working on proprietary TETRA protocols here.

Tilly

1/7/2010 9:39:00 AM

0

"Tilly" <paul1952@gmail.com> wrote in message
news:hi47f4$au5$1@news.eternal-september.org...
> "Daniel Bernard" <fifth.horseman@the.apocalypse> wrote in message
> news:ju4bk5pb0v8dvba0qpdnpd398s5vj51aj3@4ax.com...
>> On Thu, 7 Jan 2010 16:33:25 +1300, "Tilly" <paul1952@gmail.com> wrote:
>>
>>>
>>>Oh and BTW Segoline Royale's
>>
>> What?
>> --
>> amicalement,
>>
>> Daniel
>
>
> New Zealand says it is unlikely to act over claims the brother of a French
> presidential candidate was behind the 1985 bombing of a Greenpeace ship.
> Segolene Royal's brother Gerard planted the bombs that sank the Rainbow
> Warrior in Auckland harbour, another brother, Antoine Royal, said at the
> weekend.
>
> The New Zealand government said the case had been closed since 1991 and
> was unlikely to be re-opened.
>
> The attack on the ship killed photographer Fernando Pereira.
>
> French secret service agents planted two bombs on the sides of the ship in
> an attempt to sabotage Greenpeace's campaign against France's nuclear
> testing in the Pacific.........................
> --
> femail1583@gmail.com
>
>



I forgot the link.



http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/5...

--
femail1583@gmail.com


Tilly

1/7/2010 9:45:00 AM

0

"Daniel Bernard" <fifthhorseman@the.apocalypse> wrote in message
news:giabk5pbnkp3861mep641t62apetlcr932@4ax.com...
> On Thu, 7 Jan 2010 21:53:52 +1300, "Tilly" <paul1952@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> <snipped>
>
>>The attack on the ship killed photographer Fernando Pereira.
>>
> PWNED!
> --
> amicalement,
>
> Daniel




A boat, a blast and a story that glows in the dark - Editorials &
Commentary - International Herald Tribune
Andrew Johnston
PARIS - Every foreigner who moves to France, it seems, has a kind of
love-hate relationship with this proud, troubled place. For a New Zealander,
it goes like this. You're just settling into that home-away-from home
feeling when two ominous words come bubbling back up from the depths:
Rainbow Warrior.

Recently, it was the revelation that G?rard Royal, a brother of the
Socialist Party's leading presidential hopeful, S?gol?ne Royal, was one of
the intelligence agents who bombed the Greenpeace protest ship in Auckland
harbor in 1985, killing a Portuguese photographer.

One of S?gol?ne Royal's rivals for the Socialist candidacy, Laurent Fabius,
was France's prime minister at the time of the bombing. And both Fabius and
Royal lay claim to being the true inheritors of the mantle of President
Fran?ois Mitterrand. Last year it was revealed that Mitterrand had
personally authorized the attack, which made headlines around the world.

After the bombing - intended to pre-empt a floating protest against French
nuclear tests in the South Pacific - France and all things French fell into
decline in New Zealand, whose people tended to take the attack personally (a
favorite T-shirt for young New Zealanders visiting France bore the slogan,
"If it's safe, test it in Paris").

To no one's surprise, ties between the two countries entered a deep chill.
When New Zealand imprisoned the two agents it had managed to catch, France
threatened to block New Zealand exports to the European Community if they
weren't released. Under an agreement negotiated by the UN secretary general,
Javier P?rez de Cu?llar, the agents were shifted to a French military base
in the South Pacific - but France then brought them home early.

By the time I moved to France in 1997, some of this was already water under
the bridge. But I hadn't counted on the way the Rainbow Warrior affair had
hit a nerve that goes on jangling in the head of many a Frenchman. On a walk
in the country with Lucien, my future father- in-law, he declared that he
thought the bombing was a good thing. That boat, he said, had been planning
to sail into French waters. "Paff!" he exclaimed, pounding his fist into his
hand.

New Zealanders have lived for 21 years with the conundrum that a Socialist
government, fearing a floating protest against its nuclear tests in the
South Pacific, could blow up an environmental group's boat in the harbor of
a friendly nation. Many concluded that it was the kind of thing that only
France could do, with its regal assumptions of superiority and global reach.

New Zealanders are getting over all this (I married Lucien's daughter, after
all) and so are the French (as mayor of his village, Lucien performed the
ceremony). After the news about G?rard Royal, New Zealand's current prime
minister, Helen Clark, declared emphatically that the matter was closed and
no new inquiry was possible.

But the curious truth is that at some level the estrangement will endure,
because of the radioactive potato that touched off the whole Rainbow Warrior
affair: nuclear energy and nuclear weapons.

France's modern identity is inextricably tied to its nuclear "force de
frappe" - made up of the bombs that until 1995 it tested at Mururoa Atoll in
the South Pacific - and its love of nuclear power, which supplies 75 percent
of its electricity.

If Frenchness is about being nuclear and proud of it, New Zealandness is
about taking a stand against anything with the slightest whiff of
radioactivity. Already in 1973, a left-wing government had sent a cabinet
minister on a navy frigate to protest a French nuclear test at Mururoa. The
year of the Rainbow Warrior bombing, Prime Minister David Lange instigated a
ban on nuclear-armed or nuclear-powered ships.

The ban cost New Zealand its status as a U.S. ally, but was so popular with
New Zealanders that it has been supported by left and right ever since.

An official thaw is finally under way between New Zealand and France, due in
no small part to the activism of France's current ambassador to New Zealand,
Jean-Michel Marlaud, who was the force behind an invitation to New Zealand
to send 12 writers to a literary festival in France next month, Les Belles
Etrang?res.

But for a New Zealander living in France, it's still an itchy scar. The
other day, in a butcher's shop, when I confessed to being a New Zealander, a
customer grumbled, "Ah, les N?o- Z?landais, you who harassed us over that
Rainbow Warrior business."



http://www.nytimes.com/2006/10/09/opinion/09iht-edjohnston.30...

--
femail1583@gmail.com


Daniel Bernard

1/7/2010 9:48:00 AM

0

On Thu, 07 Jan 2010 09:18:39 +0100, heinrich@ruhrgasnet.de wrote:

>On Thu, 07 Jan 2010 07:57:20 +0000, Daniel Bernard
><fifth.horseman@the.apocalypse> wrote:
>
>>On Thu, 7 Jan 2010 16:18:12 +1300, "Tilly" <paul1952@gmail.com> wrote:
>>
>>>French Secret Service agents killed Greenpeace photographer Fernando Pereira
>>
>>The mong killed himself. Only a 'tard runs into a sinking ship to save
>>a camera so it's no great loss.
>poor reply especially if it is made by a person who claims to be an
>observant roman catholic. if the cowardly french did not blow up the
>ship he would still be alive.

If he did not run back to save his Kodak then he would have survived
the bomb.

That, my friend, is what is known as an epic fail.

However there is no guarantee that he would still be alive today.
After all, he could have died due to any other cause during that time.

>you should ask yourself the question whose side you are on; are you a
>loyal british citzens or lies yourloyalty is with the french.

Why would I ask myself such an irrelevant question?

>the
>solution would be to hand over your double passport to the autorities

Bwhahaha. I never give up anything to which I am entitled.
--
amicalement,

Daniel

Daniel Bernard

1/7/2010 9:48:00 AM

0

On Thu, 7 Jan 2010 21:46:08 +1300, "Tilly" <paul1952@gmail.com> wrote:

>"Daniel Bernard" <fifth.horseman@the.apocalypse> wrote in message
>news:jt4bk5pbcs9hhl5uk7nv7sce7q4p2m47ub@4ax.com...
>> On Thu, 7 Jan 2010 15:10:27 +1300, "Tilly" <paul1952@gmail.com> wrote:
>>
>> <snipped>
>>>
>>>It was the French Government I was particularly pissed with, although I
>>>stand by my statement that the French are arrogant.
>>
>> But you said that you don't make generalisations about people and
>> judge people on an individual basis. Obviously that was another of
>> your lies.
>>
>>>You will be pleased (or maybe not) to know the French have gone up my
>>>estimation recently.
>>
>> There are nearly 65 million Frenchmen and women alive today and I bet
>> not one of them gives a flying fart what some German Jewess thinks.
>> --
>> amicalement,
>>
>> Daniel
>
>
>Racist!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

What's racist about that?

Are you not a German Jewess?
--
amicalement,

Daniel

Daniel Bernard

1/7/2010 9:49:00 AM

0

On Thu, 7 Jan 2010 21:43:54 +1300, "Tilly" <paul1952@gmail.com> wrote:

>"Daniel Bernard" <fifth.horseman@the.apocalypse> wrote in message
>news:vs4bk5tbsbrmjufbm5f9hadvphcfmjuvcd@4ax.com...
>> On Thu, 7 Jan 2010 15:03:28 +1300, "Tilly" <paul1952@gmail.com> wrote:
>>
>> <snipped>
>>>
>>>lol......considering I am half French.
>>
>> Of curse you are, Steffi............................
>> --
>> amicalement,
>>
>> Daniel
>
>
>
>Absolutely and my mother had a very French surname before she married.

Really?

Now isn't that a turn up for the books?

Bwhahaha!
--
amicalement,

Daniel

Daniel Bernard

1/7/2010 9:56:00 AM

0

On Thu, 7 Jan 2010 21:40:31 +1300, "Tilly" <paul1952@gmail.com> wrote:

>One of the bombers in Aucland who got away on the Ouvea was Segolene Royal's
>brother.

I am quite aware of that.

My question related to who or what exactly is a "Segoline Royale".
--
amicalement,

Daniel