see.sense ?I got it. Bluetooth bike lights controlled from your phone. There could be an app on the phone, and when the accelerometer in the phone senses you've had a crash the lights can blink SOS in Morse code.
I've still got mine somewhere. It was pretty good as one half of a twin headlight setup, paired with a Lumotec Oval aimed a bit shorter.I miss my old Schmidt E6. Ok, it needed a new bulb occasionally and the beam was so pencil-thin that tight bends were terrifying, but it didn't half throw light a long way down the road.
I've seen that happen once in 40 years and I suspect bike lights are now cheap enough that your derailleur and disk brake callipers are more at risk as more profitable and removable.Easier by far to just take lights off.
Doesn't attract then frustrate, with possible consequences, a thief.
Surely a clever person like you can fit a mesh cover that has holes too small for the photons to fit through.Can I have a light that only emits light waves and not light particles?
This.German standard B&M Lumotec lamp powered by a Shimano dynamo-hub.
No human-machine interface required.
You fix it place, rotate dial to Senso. Furgettaboutit. It goes on and off when required, you can even leave it on all the time.
It lights the road up and lets you be seen.