I updated all of my current working projects, both fiction and non-fiction, to Scrivener 3 a few months ago.
Scrivener 3 for Windows is more than just an update to Scrivener 1. It is an almost complete re-write in several areas, primarily in the area of the Compiler, which is the engine that assembles a document, ebook or other artifact from all or portions of one or multiple Scrivener projects.
Like most conversion processes, the onboard conversion that migrates a Scrivener 1 project to Scrivener 3 does not use most of the new or revised functionality in Scrivener 3.
I have been working to Compile a newer version of the working ebook for Books of Loukas Book 1, but I now realize that I need to do a deep dive into Scrivener 3 and properly learn how to use a lot of the features of the new release. If I do not do this, I will not get a really usable e-book at the end.
So, I am putting future full-length podcasts on hold, and working for a few days to better understand Scrivener 3 features. I need to crack on and finish the final draft of Book 1, and get a sample e-book package that I can pass to some Beta reviewers.