This website is still very much a work-in-progress and it was last updated on the following day: {{ 'now' | date: "%-d %B %Y"}}. I also have a blog where I will be posting things mostly about computers, games and birds (who’d’ve thunk?).
+
Other projects
You can also find me on bateleur.org. At the moment, it is simply a mirror of hexaitos.com but hosted entirely at home. Additionally, you can find me on Gemini as well. Just go to gemini://terathopius.com or to https://terathopius.com for an HTTPS proxy of my Gemini capsule. I also have my own Gitea instance over on git.bateleur.org.
+
I am also running a Bluesky / Mastodon bot that posts a random photo of a bird of prey from Wikimedia Commons every six hours. You can find it over on @botofprey@birds.town and @botofprey.bsky.social. Both of these bots use the API of my website birds.bateleur.org which displays a random image whenever you visit it. More info on the API can be found on the website.
+
Webrings
Fediring
diff --git a/_site/feed.xml b/_site/feed.xml
index 3ef1178..41dd525 100644
--- a/_site/feed.xml
+++ b/_site/feed.xml
@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
-Jekyll2024-11-11T19:16:30+01:00https://hexaitos.com/feed.xmlHexaitos’ Personal WebsiteHosting my websites at home but I only have a public IPv6 subnet2024-10-29T00:00:00+01:002024-10-29T00:00:00+01:00https://hexaitos.com/2024/10/29/hosting_at_homeI wanted to write a small series of blog posts detailing how I made it so that my websites that are hosted at the server in my apartment (which only has a public IPv6 address) can be accessed from the Internet even if you’re in an IPv4-only network and I wanted to start by writing a post about how I delegated an IPv6 prefix to my OPNsense installation from my FRITZ!Box. (Un)fortunately, just as I finished writing it, I found out that the official (I think) OPNsense documentation has the exact thing I wrote about documented already, so there’s really no point in my posting my own version that is almost literally the same thing.
+Jekyll2024-11-11T22:47:02+01:00https://hexaitos.com/feed.xmlHexaitos’ Personal WebsiteHosting my websites at home but I only have a public IPv6 subnet2024-10-29T00:00:00+01:002024-10-29T00:00:00+01:00https://hexaitos.com/2024/10/29/hosting_at_homeI wanted to write a small series of blog posts detailing how I made it so that my websites that are hosted at the server in my apartment (which only has a public IPv6 address) can be accessed from the Internet even if you’re in an IPv4-only network and I wanted to start by writing a post about how I delegated an IPv6 prefix to my OPNsense installation from my FRITZ!Box. (Un)fortunately, just as I finished writing it, I found out that the official (I think) OPNsense documentation has the exact thing I wrote about documented already, so there’s really no point in my posting my own version that is almost literally the same thing.
Therefore, I’ll just be skipping that portion of my blog post. If you’re in Germany and a customer of Vodafone’s, then you should have been assigned a /59 IPv6 subnet and you can quite simply follow the instructions on the official documentation that I linked above.
This website is still very much a work-in-progress and it was last updated on the following day: 11 November 2024. I also have a blog where I will be posting things mostly about computers, games and birds (who’d’ve thunk?).
+
Other projects
You can also find me on bateleur.org. At the moment, it is simply a mirror of hexaitos.com but hosted entirely at home. Additionally, you can find me on Gemini as well. Just go to gemini://terathopius.com or to https://terathopius.com for an HTTPS proxy of my Gemini capsule. I also have my own Gitea instance over on git.bateleur.org.
+
I am also running a Bluesky / Mastodon bot that posts a random photo of a bird of prey from Wikimedia Commons every six hours. You can find it over on @botofprey@birds.town and @botofprey.bsky.social. Both of these bots use the API of my website birds.bateleur.org which displays a random image whenever you visit it. More info on the API can be found on the website.