At least the three first needs to have certain libraries built and installed on your computer, and it would seem like all of your modules needs some compiling, not only installing. This puts you in some trouble, since most of these won't compile under windows, without some tweaking, and sometimes not anyways.
In short, any time you need to install something under windows with activestate:
- First, as on any platform, make sure you read the README's and the docs, and check for anything you need ot have installed first.
- Use PPM, just like screamingeagle said.
- If it isn't aviable that way, download the module from CPAN or similar and unpack it. Try simply copying any .pm file you find into somewhere on your @INC path. If something needs to be compiled or linked here, it will fail. But it would have, anyways.
- If all else fails, and you need it anyways, try Cygwin. This will emulate the environment you need, so you can build all this stuff. But then you will have to stay within Cygwin, and since you want to do GFX, you probably will need to build XFree86 aswell, and I think it will all be easier to just get a Linux box. But it does work, I have tried it.
No matter if you have nmake, dmake or some other make for windows, trying to build most modules that way are more trouble than it is worth. So, on windows, you cheat. Like above.
In this particular case, however, I think you are out of luck, unless you do know what you are doing, or can find someone that has already built all that for windows. Lots of things are just not written for that platform, and it usually takes a really brave effort from some geniuses to make it do so. Thankfully, there are quite some geniuses out there. :)
You have moved into a dark place.
It is pitch black. You are likely to be eaten by a grue.