Those details are not unimportant, but they are details about how the developer is put together, not details about how it performs.
HC-110 is a very ordinary developer, except for two important features.
1) historically, it lasted much longer than Kodak ever promised. That feature probably cannot be relied upon any more; and
2) at different dilutions, HC-110 gives different performance, with the different dilutions providing performance that mirrors various Kodak commercial developers, almost all of which haven't been in commercial production for several years.
If you are expecting the new HC-110 to mirror something like DK-50 when used at the appropriate dilution, I will concede that you will need to check to see if there is consistency between old and new, although it wouldn't surprise me.
But if you are worried about it's performance differing from old HC-110 using dilution B - or even unofficial dilution H - I would ask you the question - why would they do what they have done? They could have advertised it as new, improved HC-110 II, now made again in USA. Instead they have designed it to be a functionally direct replacement for the old version.