My understanding is most of the well-known holdouts eventually caved and renormed their grades to something consistent with contemporary standards. I think that basically tells you your answer. If, say, even Princeton decided many of its students would be better off with higher reported grades, I doubt there are many if any colleges that could get away with it.
Now, what I believe still exists is materially different norms by major, but I am not sure that is always accounted for when you try to jump fields.
Like, Applied Math, Engineering, Physics, and Chemistry usually have relatively low reported average GPAs, and I think that may not be a big deal if you continue in those fields.
But you can major in anything you like for law school, and so you can, say, major in Physics and then apply to law schools. But then do law schools really adjust fully for the different grading norms in Physics? I am not sure they actually do. Like I am not sure a 3.5 Physics major will actually do as well in law school admissions, all else equal including LSAT, as a 3.7 English major, even if they arguably should.
So personally, depending on what options I might want to keep open, I would not necessarily worry too much about which college I chose, but I would think carefully about which major I chose.