Is it actually running snap or just unpacking its content and running it as a normal flatpak?
It’s unpacking the snap and running the contents.
Neither. The Flatpak is built by unpacking the contents of the snap, after which it’s a completely normal Flatpak.
Snaps are just squashfs images with that package and its dependencies, so if the snap isn’t doing something fancy like using patchelf or depending on content snaps, it makes a lot of sense that the snap would be extractable and usable for Flatpak. It’s probably doable the other way around too, though as far as I know snapcraft doesn’t have an official way to use a Flatpak as its source like Flatpak does with snaps.
FreeOTP+ is a good TOTP app for mobile, if anybody is looking for a TOTP app. It’s a FOSS fork extending an internal Red Hat app. https://f-droid.org/packages/org.liberty.android.freeotpplus/
I personally used to use AndOTP.
Thanks for the suggestion
This one
Ahahah sorry, I know what Authy is.
Mine wanted to be a way to say that after I discovered Ente Authenticator (the link I attached), which is another 2FA app that keeps an encrypted backup of your codes and lets you access them on multiple platforms and it’s foss, I “almost forgot about Authy” since Ente Auth replaced it perfectly for my use case.
I thought that since is not a very famous project others could have found it useful
It has been requested for so long and they still won’t release a proper package!
didn’t they announce ending the desktop app?
Already happened as of March 18th
That sucks. Time to find an alternative.
I went for 2FAS, authy doesn’t have option to export the codes so it took some time.
That was the reason I didn’t hesitate to choose 2FAS because there is an export option, so if I change my mind it won’t be so much of a struggle
They don’t exactly have a desktop app but there is an add-on to autocomplete the codes via phone pushed request
Nah don’t use authy. Use Aegis if you’re Android or Raivo if you’re ios. Both of these are open source and you can back up your secret keys.
Spotify too lol. What’s so bad about that? It’s just a special source form, after it’s packaged as flatpak, there are no ages-long startup times or Ubuntu-specific security