Originally posted by PJ1 True. But the amount of time one would spend looking through an EVF would be very small compared to computer time (PP)
The potential issue is that most photographers use not merely one eye, but the same eye, when looking through the viewfinder. If evidence were to surface that EVF's contributed, even if only a small amount, to issues in one eye, that would certainly put a new perspective on the whole "mirrorless is
the future" narrative that's being shoved down everyone's throats. In any case, I think tech-minded people are way too quick to predict the demise of various formats. Most of the technological advantages of mirrorless involve issues that the majority of serious photographers don't care about. Burst rate, video, mirror-slap --- only tech nerds and some pros care much about that stuff. Half the photographers in our local camera club don't even know what burst rate is and wouldn't know how to access it if you explained it to them. Technology may change, but human nature remains the same, and if a technology cannot be fully adapted to human nature, it won't become universal.