I'm in the same boat, with a lot of Olympus gear, and frankly a lot of fond memories of using it. This financial hanky-panky is worrisome. It has nothing to do with the technical aspects of their products, except that the future product development is on hold. I'm seem to get email every day touting some current product, or sale, so they are definitely pushing to move what is on the shelf now. Survival mode, keep the revenue coming in despite the bad news.
This is only one of a series of crises that have hurt the Japanese technology companies this year. The tsunami closed many plants in spring, then the floods in Thailand in October wiped out Nikon and pieces of Sony and Canon. Olympus slid by that, because much of their assembly is in China.
But until they resolve this accounting fraud nightmare, the company will be very uncertain and cash poor, which may freeze new development for a while. Their problems seem to have receded to the back pages of the financial news, but nothing is resolved. Stock is up a little, buoyed by the fact that the stock price put the value of the company below half the book value of the endoscope division alone.
One scenario is they somehow coast through this, with government help. After all, the investment losses happened 20 years ago, and they were able to hide them behind fake acquisitions for all these years. They got caught though, and now they have to admit the losses and clear the books.
If they can't weather this storm, another scenario is a split with the camera part going to say Panasonic, and the endoscope part going to another established endoscope company. Olympus holds 90% of the market for GI surgery endoscopes -- that's attractive to competitors.
One thing's for sure: the Olympus products I have now are great. I am hoping they can continue as a company to deliver more fantastic products.