COPYRIGHT
                    =========
                    
        (c) 2003 Christian Winter. All rights reserved.

        This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
        modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.

	You should have received a copy of the Perl license along with
	Perl; see the file README in Perl distribution.
 
	You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
	along with Perl; see the file Copying.  If not, write to
	the Free Software Foundation, 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA.

	You should have received a copy of the Artistic License
	along with Perl; see the file Artistic.


        Author of this software makes no claim whatsoever about suitability,
        reliability, edability, editability or usability of this product, and
        should not be kept liable for any damage resulting from the use of
        it. If you can use it, you are in luck, if not, I should not be kept
        responsible. Keep a handy copy of your backup tape at hand.

                    DESCRIPTION
                    ===========

        Date::Spoken::German is a perl module that helps you convert
        date values given as integers or unix timestamps into their
        text representation as spoken in german language. E.g. the
        7.5.2003 is converted to "siebter Mai zweitausenddrei".

                    INSTALL
                    =======

        To install Date::Spoken::German simply change to the directory
        into which you extracted the module source and type
                perl Makefile.PL
                make
                make install
        After that the module should be installed and useable. You can
        then get help by typing "perldoc Date::Spoken::German".
        
        Note for windows users: use "nmake" instead of "make" to install
        Date::Spoken::German.
        
        Just for convenience I've added two install scripts. The first one,
        install.sh, is for *nix systems with a /bin/sh, the second one,
        install.cmd, for windows system. They don't do anything more than
        explained above, install.sh uses "make" and install.cmd calls
        "nmake".
        
                     BUGS
                     ====

        Send all bugs to
        Christian Winter <thepoet@a-za-z0-9.de>
        
                     HOMEPAGE
                     ========

        http://www.a-za-z0-9.de/perlmodules/