Greg, The question was aimed at the original poster.
On Sun, Sep 24, 2023 at 8:40 PM Gregory Kuzmicki <gregory.kuzmi...@gmail.com> wrote: > 8:38 PM EDT (Sunday) > > Jason: > A dynamic link library on windows(. dll) is like a shared library(. so) > on linux > -Greg > > Frank: > > For me personally, what I am working on is PCI compliant payment > processing. I am trying to process Visa, MasterCard, AMEX, in compliance > with PCI standards for a series of *NAS VENDING MACHINES* -- I am the lead > R&D/owner in my team; I have research assts. and several volunteers. > Similarly, I am trying to create bank accounts/retirement accounts for my > employees and manage their company spend budget with a terminal card / > debit card / or other payment card. Ideally we would like to keep iterating > on a system such that we can move beyond the "expiration date" > feature/security tool and issue a card that expires naturally with its user. > > > -Greg > > On Sunday, September 24, 2023, Frank Gingras <thu...@apache.org> wrote: > >> This sounds like a homework question... what problem are you trying to >> solve, exactly? >> >> On Sun, Sep 24, 2023 at 2:16 PM Jason Long <hack3r...@yahoo.com.invalid> >> wrote: >> >>> Hello, >>> Thank you so much for your reply. >>> Which libraries are common between the Linux and Windows operating >>> systems? >>> >>> >>> On Sun, Sep 24, 2023 at 9:29 PM, Frank Gingras >>> <thu...@apache.org> wrote: >>> It depends on the vulnerability, and if some library is the culprit, and >>> if that library is present on that operating system. >>> >>> On Sun, Sep 24, 2023 at 1:56 PM Jason Long <hack3r...@yahoo.com.invalid> >>> wrote: >>> >>> Hello, >>> If a vulnerability is found in the Apache web server, then does that >>> vulnerability work both in Apache under Linux and Windows operating systems? >>> >>> >>> Thank you. >>> >>> > > -- > Sent from my iPhone >