Posted this in the other thread, but feel it applies here too--I'm pretty sure that the people talking about EVF "lag" have only ever used a mirrorless camera with very slow shutter speed, in which case they're really talking about *stutter*--this has nothing to do with 30 fps or 60 fps. With a normal shutter speed set on the camera, 30 fps looks perfectly smooth. All the mirrorless cameras I've ever used have a way to turn off exposure simulation in low light so the EVF doesn't stutter like that, if you actually want to use 1/3 sec shutter speeds, so this is really user error. Someone probably paid a bunch of money on a mirrorless camera, unboxed it in their dark house, pointed it at their cat without changing any settings, noticed it stuttering, and boxed it right back up to return it, without investigating further. I do not take people seriously when they just cite "lag" when it's obvious they are talking about situations where there shouldn't be any lag, except for what happens due to user incompetence.
The people who actually know what they're talking about, when talking about lag, are really talking about frame dropping or "blackout," though the EVF doesn't necessarily go black, when tracking a moving subject while simultaneously clicking the shutter at a high rate (10+ fps or higher). That's a rather niche use case, and while it is a problem, it has nothing to do with "30 fps," so I'm sure that the loudest detractors of mirrorless cameras aren't actually talking about this, which is why nobody takes them seriously.
>>3781580This applies to you, you stupid ass.