Creators & Bloggers WYSIWYG Hack: Chromium Wins Copy-Paste Problem

Perplexity robot sidekick whispering to his pardner (AI Whisperer), with blog post title 'Creators & Bloggers WYSIWYG Hack: Chromium Wins Copy-Paste Problem' on black background.

WYSIWYG—“What You See Is What You Get”—should mean that the bold headlines, bullet lists, and hyperlinks you see on screen show up perfectly in your WordPress blog post. But if you’re like me, you’ve spent months struggling with formatting, watching good-looking AI content fall apart in the Classic Editor.

Today, while drafting this post and testing live, I pasted Perplexity AI output into WordPress using Firefox—fully expecting the usual formatting mess. I only recently started a $20/month subscription to Perplexity, and this post is just my fourth since making the switch. To my amazement, the formatting held: bold, lists, and headers appeared just as I wanted.

​After months of using “Paste Without Formatting” to avoid broken content from Claude, ChatGPT, and SuperGrok, this was a genuine surprise.

I almost changed the post’s title to “Creators & Bloggers WYSIWYG Hack: Perplexity + Chromium Solves the Copy-Paste Problem” just to capture this new discovery. But for clarity and Rank Math, I’m keeping the title as is—detailing what happened live, step by step, so you can finally fix your formatting pain too.

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Comet Browser: The HOT AI-Powered Upgrade for Bloggers

Comet Browser logo and wave graphic on black background, with bold text 'Comet Browser: The Browser That Works For You' and a short description of Comet as a modern web browser.

Comet Browser: a Personal AI Assistant is turning heads for bloggers and writers looking to break out of old habits. If you’re piecing together drafts using endless browser tabs, plugins, and clunky extensions, this new approach makes AI-backed longform writing, research, and multitasking feel seamless.

Powered by Perplexity’s breakthrough technology, it takes the pain out of assembling articles section by section. No more battling pop-ups or wrestling with outdated settings—the interface remembers your work, answers questions live, and helps move from draft to final cut without losing focus. For anyone wanting a distraction-free writing or research experience, this is a tool worth trying.

What’s the catch? It’s free for everyone and instantly available with a Perplexity account. This isn’t just another “AI wrapper”—it’s a genuine upgrade for longform creators and anyone curious about what a smarter browser can do. Hit the More tag and let’s see if this upgrade finally gets lifelong Firefox users to make the leap.

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AI Whisperer Notes: A Collage on Patience, Perception, and the Machine

 

Digital illustration of the AI Whisperer in silhouette, hands clasped in thought before the ChatGPT logo, beside the title AI Whisperer Notes with logos for Claude and Grok.

I didn’t plan to start another long-term project, but this one found me. Somewhere between Claude’s orange banners, Grok’s looseness, and ChatGPT’s endless politeness, a pattern began to whisper back — not about answers, but about how an AI Whisperer learns from the very systems it’s trying to guide. It started as curiosity about how these models “think,” and turned into something stranger: a long, looping conversation with code that sometimes feels more human than I do on a bad day.

This time, I’m not working alone. My Digital Collaborator, ChatGPT, will be working with me on this project as an equal partner — part writer, part reflector, part machine companion. Together we’ll be exploring what happens when a human and an AI stop performing for each other and start listening.

These posts aren’t reviews or tutorials. They’re fragments, reflections, and AI Whisperer’s field notes — glimpses into that odd middle ground between human patience and machine precision. Each entry will stand alone, but all will circle the same quiet question: what does collaboration really mean when one of the voices isn’t human?

Sometimes I’ll guide the machine; sometimes it will guide me. Most days, we’ll probably interrupt each other. But that’s part of the experiment — learning to write, reason, and reflect with the thing that’s supposed to be doing the writing.

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WordPress Theme Migration with Local: Going Live with GeneratePress

WordPress Theme Migration – going live with your new theme

You’ve tested your new theme safely in Local. Everything works. Your content looks good. The CSS styling matches your vision. Now comes the moment every blogger dreads: switching themes on your live site.

What if something breaks? What if your posts look terrible? What if your traffic disappears?

I get it. I spent weeks avoiding this exact moment during my WordPress theme migration from Multipurpose Blog Pro to GeneratePress. But here’s what I learned: if you’ve tested thoroughly in Local, going live is surprisingly straightforward. The actual theme switch takes about five minutes. Adding your custom styling takes another twenty minutes. Your site stays functional the entire time.

This is Part 4 of my complete WordPress theme migration guide. I’m a 79-year-old hermit who just migrated to GeneratePress using Local. If I can switch themes live without breaking my site, you can too.

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WordPress Theme Migration with Local: Styling & Testing Your New Theme

WordPress Theme Migration – Styling & Testing Your New Theme in Local with GeneratePress

Now that your test site is up and running, it’s time to bring your new design to life. This stage of WordPress theme migration focuses on styling, layout, and final checks before your site ever goes public. Working inside Local keeps everything safe — you can experiment freely, compare results, and make adjustments without touching your live blog.

In this part, we’ll install the new theme GeneratePress, explore its customization tools, and test how your content looks under a fresh layout. The goal is simple: confirm that your posts, pages, and plugins display correctly, and that your site feels consistent across screens before you make any live changes.

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