Now that we (or many users) with WordPress.com sites can add plugins, I have taken the opportunity to ‘clean up’ old posts, which means converting them from Classic Editor to Blocks.
If there is a batch way to do them all in one go, I haven’t found it. But I found the ‘Convert to Blocks’ plugin and that has a neat trick, which is that when a Classic Editor post is opened in the Admin panel, it automatically changes the whole post to Blocks. Then all you have to do it ‘save’. That’s it.
Weill that would be a neat trick if I had only a few posts, but I have almost 2,400 posts, going back over nearly twenty years.
Twenty years.
How did that happen?
What happens when you activate the plugin is that you get a new column in the Admin panel of posts. The column entries describe whether a post was made with the Block Editor or Classic Editor. Then you can immediately see which you want to update.
About half of my posts were already styled with the Block Editor and I’ve been slowly looking at old posts and converting them.
Why do I bother? Well it’s because Block themes are capricious in the way they render posts built with the Classic Editor. And I have the time here and there to look and examine and re-read and change posts.
Reading old posts is like reading someone else’s work. And I have junked a few posts that were somehow mistakes. That is, they have a title and a couple of lines and seem to be abbreviated versions of other posts that were complete.
So, that’s that.
But in the course of looking at old posts I found some interesting old photos I made years OK. My normal method of downloading them right from the Admin panel works with some photos but not with others.
The ones it doesn’t work with are in iframes, which makes extracting the information about the images more tricky, and only then can I download them.
In the Admin panel, when I right-click on some images I see this:

So why are some images in iframes?
So far as I can tell, the reason is that WP.com used to use a service named Photon and it would wrap some images to handle scaling.
I wonder whether it is because I tend to use bigger images – meaning bigger pixel dimensions to present them wider on the page?
For example, this image is my typical 1500px wide and at wide spacing in this WordPress theme it renders at 1340px wide.

Meanwhile, in the middle of all the current destruction, at least three tankers in the Hormuz Strait and oil facilities in Gulf States have been hit.
I am sure the environment will thank us for it in some way at some point.
