Turn off the automatic change from lcd to evf... and buy a hawk's helicoid adapter for your m lenses!
I personally like the yellow peaking, and have set various functions to the programmable buttons and little control wheel, such as ae lock, focus magnification, iso, etc.
That comes up when your shutter speed is less than 1.5 times the reciprocal of your focal length. In other words, if you're shooting a 20mm lens, that warning comes up when you use a shutter speed slower than 1/30. This doesn't flash if you use manual focus lenses, only native lenses.
Personally, I find the 5n with the EVF much better than the Nex 7 - I only use manual focus lenses on it. The ability to articulate the finder through 90 degrees is something I'm finding invaluable for what I shoot. The only real control I use on the fly is the exposure variation - press the lower side of the wheel to bring up then adjust with the wheel - I run it in auto ISO and AE unless I specifically want a low ISO for effect. In reasonable light I can manual focus accurately without peaking or magnification at f/1.4 on a 35mm lens. Here's a couple of snaps with the 5n
I also liked the option of tilting up the 5N's EVF, but I eventually sold it, because the NEX-7's EVF is so much more compact and the camera's controls are nicer, even with manual lenses.
With legacy lenses, I set to A mode and you also need to set the camera to fire with no lens attached. The manual focus experience is pretty good, but you'll probably want to focus with a large aperture and then stop down. At say f/8, most things are indicated in focus even though they might not be.
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