Experimenting with Docker containers has become a bit of a hobby lately. Recently, I talked about four of my favorite daily-use containers. Since then, I’ve “done my homework” and discovered a few more useful containers, and have had a few recommended to me by a very enthusiastic community.
At the suggestion of one of our readers, I installed Portainer to help manage my Docker containers, so that’s made it easier to manage things.
It made testing much easier, so I found a few more containers that have entered my daily rotation.
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Linkwarden
Another fantastic Pocket alternative
Previously, I’ve been using Wallabag as a replacement for Pocket. A reader recommended trying Linkwarden instead, and I have to say it’s quite good. It’s more than a replacement for the older app, serving as an archival/preservation tool instead of being limited to a “read-stuff-later” app.
I found it easier to set up after a quick sign-up procedure than Wallabag. Without even reading the documentation, I figured out how to import links from Pocket, Wallabag, and a Bookmarks file and immediately started adding links manually. The ability to tag them and give them a description is a nice touch. It only took a few minutes to add about 11 work links to their own category and tag them.
I set up a few more folders for other work and added a tag called Technology & Weird Stuff. Unlike Pocket (RIP) and Wallabag, Linkwarden sets up your saved files as either a link that directs you straight to the original website or it offers you four different viewing modes (image, HTML, PDF, and something called ‘readable’).
Readable mode takes you to a typical reader view, while the other three do exactly what they say they will: HTML outputs it as a webpage image outputs it as an image, and PDF lets you download it as a PDF file, although it’s worth mentioning that some links you save won’t be available right away in that format. At least that was my experience; it took about a minute for the option to appear on one of the links I entered.
I’m using Linkwarden predominantly as an archive of my own journalistic work from over the years (just the stuff under my own name, not the ghostwritten work), but I plan to expand it to replace Wallabag and Instapaper down the line. It’s so seamless, fast, and simple to organize that it would be counterproductive not to continue using it whenever something catches my eye online or I want to save my latest work.
Stirling-PDF
A better and lightweight PDF editor with plenty of features
I do a lot of work with PDFs and other document types. It’s part of the reason I like Stirling PDF so much. Just like other self-hosted tools, you can add it to your main Docker Compose file and run it locally. Part of my plan with these containers is to rebuild and archive my portfolio. Saving them to PDF and combining them is part of that.
Stirling PDF handles PDFs for editing and viewing pretty well, and it’s on par with viewing programs like CDisplayEx. They look good in the display, too. The merge function takes only a few seconds and can immediately create a large file. This will come in handy for my archive project in the near future.
The conversion feature is handy, and the PDF multi-tool lets you change or modify different aspects of the document. But perhaps the best feature is the process OCR feature, which makes your PDFs searchable through OCR, which stands for Optical Character Recognition, by the way.
I already use this program often and anticipate even more use in the very near future. And you know I’m totally going to watermark every document I make.
Uptime Kuma
The monitoring tool for self-hosting
Uptime Kuma is a simple tool with a dedicated function. But it’s an incredibly useful function! All I had to do was give the tool access to my Docker socket, and then I added my Docker containers.
That’s it. Now that I had all of them set up on Uptime Kuma, I could monitor them for changes, errors, or downtime. When there’s an issue, the dashboard notifies you so you can take action.
It has options for so many different applications; it’s a remarkably useful tool in a very unassuming package.
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Using Docker has been life-changing for both my creativity and productivity
Docker containers are a wonderful way to test and run different types of apps in my home lab. I have been pleasantly surprised by the functionality and ease of use of these containers and am glad I opened my mind to open-source and self-hosted alternatives to the big-name apps I once used extensively.
These are three of the better and more useful containers I’ve used and have made quite an impact in how I archive my own work. I’ll keep using them for a long time to come and am always interested in trying new containers as I continue to get more comfortable with integrating Docker into my work.
- OS
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Windows, macOS, Linux
- Brand
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Docker






