Interesting to see how different Fuji's and Sony's design decisions are... I'm a Fuji shooter (X-Pro 2, soon to add an X-T2 replacing an X-T1 backup body), and I love Fuji's full set of quasi-mechanical controls - they are all feeding into the computer, but they are made to look and feel like mechanical controls of old. For some reason, Fuji ALSO uses a full set of digital controls on the SAME camera (an X-Pro 2 has dual command dials and four arrow buttons, despite having dedicated controls for Shutter Speed, Aperture, Exposure Compensation and ISO plus a joystick to move the AF point). The X-T2 adds dedicated controls for drive and metering mode (I count SEVEN dedicated control points (admittedly, including the aperture ring on the lens) - WHAT is left to use the digital buttons and dials for? You can control the whole camera without ever using a non-dedicated control (well, other than 1/3 stops of shutter speed). It has menus, but really only for setup!
In contrast, the new Sony a6500 (an X-T2 with an E-mount and IBIS, for all practical purposes), has only 1.5 dials, none of them dedicated. There's one nice dial on the top deck plus one really lousy one shared with the four-way controller on the back. You can't even control all the basic exposure variables (aperture and shutter plus ISO, or one of them plus exposure comp and ISO) at once. The old NEX-7 actually did better - the extra top dial meant that you had your two primary variables on nice top dials, with ISO on the very mushy rear dial - not as nice as a bunch of dedicated controls, but very usable. The A7 series has a dedicated exposure compensation dial, but the small front and rear main dials don't get great reviews (they're similar to Fuji's, but you don't need them on a Fuji, because shutter and aperture have dedicated controls)..