Board Thread:Support Requests - Getting Technical/@comment-39949541-20200322020140/@comment-9605025-20200322025652

The fact that a lot of features are currently missing is the exact reason why they haven't migrated any pre-existing wikis yet. However, they will be doing that as features become available. As of the last timeline estimate, most/all wikis will be using the new platform by the end of 2020.

As for why they rolled the new platform out for new wikis, that is a whole discussion that staff and users are already having. In favor of rolling it out: Points that have been raised against rolling it out:
 * 1) Most new wikis don't require advanced features; so not having them isn't a huge issue
 * 2) It gets new communities/users introduced to the new platform so it isn't a surprise to them when pre-existing wikis migrate later
 * 3) It provides pre-existing users an opportunity to get used to the new platform before their communities get migrated
 * 4) It allows further refinement of the new platform through collection of actual performance data and user feedback
 * 1) It is still not developed enough; more testing should have been done before rolling it out
 * 2) *Even if there aren't as many features, there shouldn't be this many obvious bugs
 * 3) New users should not have to deal with bugs and changing features
 * 4) *Since they are new, they may not even know what is a bug and what isn't
 * 5) *Since pre-existing users haven't had time to test it out, how does the community help new users who want to do this and that? It is the blind leading the blind.
 * 6) With so few features ready to go, users are probably going to create a new wiki and then be disappointed when they find out they can't replicate a design they saw on an older wiki.