The best starting place for everyone is to read Ctein's article. He did his usual responsible and careful work. While my experience with the new films does not entirely agree with his, I generally agree. I find that the new films have significantly less grain and somewhat higher saturation. Sharpness seems about the same, to me, maybe slightly improved in the 160 films. The higher saturation has rendered the color of 160NC, IMO, a bit less accurate than its predecessor. This is unfortunate, but the other side of the situation is that the film is usable for a wider range of subjects. The higher saturation is a real plus for me in 400VC. It strikes a very good balance for the Southwestern landscapes that I generally shoot. It will replace my former use of 400UC with significant improvements.
Scanability has become a real issue with film, so I am glad Ctein addressed the subject. I don't find his methodology at present to be particularly great, but it is a useful start on a necessary measurement. For the past five years or so, Kodak has been touting increased scanability for their professional films. My experience has confirmed, at least for me, that scanned images from those films generally require less correction and are easier to work with than those from their competitors. (Recently, I think Fuji has pretty well caught up.) I haven't had all that much experience scanning the new Portras, but they seem to be about the same as their predecessors, or maybe a little bit harder to work with. Incidentally, I have never found Kodachrome to be exceptionally easy to scan, although I think it has the best visual color of any film around.