excellent point to start with when choosing to use the 'rsync the
patches' scheme. Starting with perl@7582, which means a set of source
files on which the latest applied patch is number 7582, you apply all
-succeeding patches available from than on (7583, 7584, ...).
+succeeding patches available from then on (7583, 7584, ...).
You can use the patches later as a kind of search archive.
To report a bug in Perl, use the program I<perlbug> which comes with
Perl (if you can't get Perl to work, send mail to the address
-I<perlbug@perl.com> or I<perlbug@perl.org>). Reporting bugs through
+I<perlbug@perl.org> or I<perlbug@perl.com>). Reporting bugs through
I<perlbug> feeds into the automated bug-tracking system, access to
which is provided through the web at I<http://bugs.perl.org/>. It
often pays to check the archives of the perl5-porters mailing list to