So precisely how many Nikon owners are actually calling for this? The internet is great at magnifying peoples' voices beyond all scale of their actual numbers and given the sales of DSLR and MFT (not the magazine bandwagons but actual sales) such a decision would be considered reasonable in any other area.
This is the downfall of any large company with an established product base to protect, and a huge opportunity for any up-and-coming company (or an old company having a revival).
Anyone remember Nokia? A huge company with a well-established product base, reduced to nothing because they missed the smartphone revolution while they were busy trying to sell people more and more of the same old thing (they made a few, feeble attempts - too little, too late). Or Kodak, reduced from being the big name in photography to a mere shell, subsisting mostly on a bunch of old patents? Or IBM, who missed the PC revolution because, in their myopia, they couldn't see a use for a computer in the home? Or, conversely, Apple's revival, from being a has-been in the 90s, with minimal market share and no-one buying their Macs (with all their software compatibility/availability issues), to becoming a dominant player firstly with the iPod (and, more importantly, iTunes), then the iPhone. And, more recently, Sony, whose digital imaging division has become the one bright spot in an otherwise-fading company?
There was no demand for cars before Henry Ford created one, and horses had a far larger share of the market than early cars...