Now Massao.....c'mon Homey....
Olympus has already debunked the going out of business scenario. I've had Olympus cameras for close to 50 years now and when it went to digital I must have witnessed the rampant speculation at least a half-dozen times about them going out of business. Of course, none of that came to fruition because their medical division relies on them for R&D, etc. But more so, Olympus keeps on innovating, as they were the ones that:
1. Invented (and still have the best version) the Dustbuster internal sensor cleaning mechanism. Of course, when released, the other brands labeled it as a "gimmick," but what'ya know...just about all brands emplloy dustbusters....
2. Invented "Live View" - and again, the competition labeled it as a gimmick, but wow...look who is using live view now? All of the brands!
3. Invented internal pixel mapping in which you can map out hot pixels via your menu. With other brands (at the time), you'd have to send your cameras into repair - but with Olympus you did it yourself within seconds. And what-ya know....you guessed it, it was labeled as another gimmick by the competition. But since then a few of the brands have incorporated this feature in their options set.
I could go on and on and on, but suffice it to say, Olympus has been in the forefront of camera technological design.
Now keep in mind, I base my comments on having used a variety of equipment - and I do NOT speculate on gear that I've never used or owned (which unfortunately, occurs all too often on these forums).
I shoot with Samsung NX (NX 30, NX500, and NX Mini), the Fuji X system, the Canon EOS M system, and various Micro 4/3 cameras from both Olympus and Panasonic. I've found Micro 4/3 to be an exceptionally viable option and can stand up to the best of them IQ-wise. And talk about lens availability - wow, they have a massive collection from Olympus, Panasonic, and other 3rd party makers.
The other day I had to do a photo shoot at one of the most photographed historical locations in the county I live in. It's of an old Grist Mill in a county park. They (the parks system) choose mine as part of their ongoing marketing program - all taken with 20 MP Olympus Pen F, using a Panasonic Lumix 12-60 F3.5-5.6 OIS lens (equivalent to a 24-120 MM focal reach).
Here are some samples of that shoot.



