I second
JamesNC's advice -- get a developer's license from Active State, and use perlapp!
(That's the program which produces a standalone Perl application).
I was the main Perl programmer at my last company, so they actually bought me a license, but if I had to get one again, I now know its benefits. Perlapp has the nice features of running on Linux and Windows both (and one or two other OS's I never used), and any modules which you're using when you build the executable are automatically included, so you don't have to worry about it running on a "non-Perl" machine. There's a lot more to the developer's package as well, but perlapp alone makes it worth the price.
@ARGV=split//,"/:L";
map{print substr crypt($_,ord pop),2,3}qw"PerlyouC READPIPE provides"
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