She said she could do her job in 45 minutes and that the rest of the day there was nothing else to do.
Finally, cell phone service came to our area, (yes, we were very backwards here) and I fired her, took the computer home, cut 4 of my land lines and forwarded them all to my cell phone.
So basically the job could be done in 45 minutes... Why did you ever hire someone you didn't need?
If you look at the links under the actual article you find this one.
"A study of Apache security advisories dating back to Apache 1.0 shows the server's last serious problem (one where remote attackers could run arbitrary code on the server) was announced in January 1997. This problem was a buffer overflow in Apache's cookie module that was fixed in Apache 1.1.3.
A group of less serious problems (including a buffer overflow in the server's logresolve utility) was announced and fixed in January 1998 with Apache 1.2.5. In the three and a half years since then, Apache's only remote security problems have been a handful of denial-of-service and information leakage problems (where attackers can see files or directory listings they shouldn't)."
She said she could do her job in 45 minutes and that the rest of the day there was nothing else to do.
Finally, cell phone service came to our area, (yes, we were very backwards here) and I fired her, took the computer home, cut 4 of my land lines and forwarded them all to my cell phone.
So basically the job could be done in 45 minutes... Why did you ever hire someone you didn't need?
"A study of Apache security advisories dating back to Apache 1.0 shows the server's last serious problem (one where remote attackers could run arbitrary code on the server) was announced in January 1997. This problem was a buffer overflow in Apache's cookie module that was fixed in Apache 1.1.3.
A group of less serious problems (including a buffer overflow in the server's logresolve utility) was announced and fixed in January 1998 with Apache 1.2.5. In the three and a half years since then, Apache's only remote security problems have been a handful of denial-of-service and information leakage problems (where attackers can see files or directory listings they shouldn't)."
There are your numbers :)