The downvoted questions I can see...
I want to use net\http to POST form data onto a website. I know there are libraries like mechanize that can ease the process, but I'm wondering if there's a way I can do the same with net/http.
Ideally you would work on this solution first before asking the question, the question would then say. I've written this code using net/http and it does this, but I expected it to do that instead. I.e. an attempt at the problem so we can see where and why you're stuck, otherwise what do you want us to say as an answer? Here's some code using mechanize, I've tried to implement this same solution using net/http but I got stuck here would likely work too.
I'm trying to learn about the Win32api for Ruby, and I've come across the HWND type in different functions such as the MessageBox function. What does the HWND type do, and what data type does it belong to; pointer, integer, or long?
What are you trying to do. Are you trying to display a MessageBox? Have you written some code to do so that doesn't display a message box? If so show that code so we can see where you've gone wrong?
I'm trying to make a Ruby script which to connect WiFi, and look for other WiFi networks. I wonder if there's a way, to connect to wifi using raw sockets perhaps, or the Net series of gems, but I don't know where to start, can anyone help me with this?
You're basically asking us to find something, a gem, for you. We're not an alternative to a search engine here. If you can't find a library perhaps you can write your own solution using some underlying capability of the platform. If you get stuck on that, we can probably help.
You need to concentrate on your questions being more specific programming problems rather than where do I start if I want to do X, they usually tend not to fly well.
Moderators are unlikely to help much, there's no reason to suppose they will be experts in the topics you're asking about.
Go through the help center especially the sections on asking and what not to ask and adjust your questions accordingly, which may well mean doing more research first so that you have actual practical problems.