EDS Awareness Bundle Giveaway

Hey Guys!

EDS awareness month may be over but for those living with the condition it is a never ending battle. So I’ve offered to team up with Hannah over at Sunshine & Spoons to help co-host an amazing giveaway she’s offering which includes all these amazing EDS awareness prizes and I’m super excited to be a part of it 🙂

This amazing prize includes: Zebra Ribbon Decals, an EDS ribbon necklace from Kat Makes Stuff, an EDS awareness tee, 3 EDS lapel ribbons, 10 lemon challenge cards, 10 EDS fact cards, 3 EDS awareness bracelets and an EDS awareness mug.

All you have to do to be in with the chance of winning this awesome prize package is enter here:
a Rafflecopter giveaway

Unfortunately, due to high shipping costs this giveaway is only open to all you lovely people who live in the USA and Canada. Anyone else will have to pay shipping costs. Your email will only be used to notify you if you win. All entries will be verified. The prize opens on 20th June 2017 and closes on 27th June 2017. Good Luck!!

Co-hosts:

Hannah from Sunshine and Spoons 

Sarah from My Stripy Life 

Brittany from A Southern Celiac 

Sara at Zebra Writes

Jenni at 1nvisibl3Girl 

Mary at The Headache Heroine 

24 Comments on “EDS Awareness Bundle Giveaway

  1. I administer a couple of Linux machines for my parents who live on the other side of the country (long story short, I don’t want to put out Windows fires every week), and having everything set up with IPv6 actually simplifies things (Well, it would if I also didn’t have to keep IPv4 going too)Of course there’s a firewall In fact, everything except port 22 (SSH) is blocked But it’s super nice to just `ssh dadscomputer` wherever I am to log in when needed I even have DNS set up so that I can `ssh dadscomputermydomaincom` if I’m away from my normal shortcuts No need to remember IPs or forwarded ports If I’m doing it from my phone though, I usually have to shut off Wi-fi as most networks don’t do IPv6 :/As far as security goes, all accounts must use public keys (except for mine, but I have a strong password) I actually see more login attempts from port-forwarded IPv4 (on a nonstandard port) than IPv6 on port 22 Each machine gets 2-3 IPv6 addresses, depending on how it’s feeling:* SLAAC-configured temporary address (cycles every so often; outbound connections are supposed to use it for “privacy”)* SLAAC-configured static address (based on MAC, I might disable this)* DHCPv6 address (gets associated with public DNS entry by DHCP server)

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *