Translation: I want to ski faster than my vision allows. Translation: Grasshopper calls BS.
I want, I want. I want. Everybody wants. Not many get.
Take a step back and look (pun intended) at what you need and the tools you have to accomplish that need.
Have you ever seen me skied Whistler Bowl in the fog during the gathering? Of course you didn’t. Visibility was so bad, even I didn’t see myself skiing that in the fog. But I felt it. With my skis. Every bump. The trick to the whole thing is, don’t look, feel instead.
If your eyes don’t work. Switch to one or more of you other sensors. You do that every time you walked into a darken room in your own home and the lights won’t come on.
The alternate input sensors will have a much shorter range. The reaction time frame will be much shorter. The take away is “Do not over drive your low beam.”
You have the tools available to you. Use them as designed is the key.
It works for moderate variations in terrain you know well, or if you are closely following someone who does.
If you don't know the terrain well, you wind up like the people I know who skied off drops (fortunately "only" 5 feet or so) that they did not see. Tactile feedback ain't gonna solve that one.
That is not a sensor issue.
That falls under the database and firmware functions. Or is it malfunctions. Could also be a CPU issue.
Translation: You cannot see where you are going. You have no idea what lies ahead. You know it could be potentially dangerous but your survival instinct was not strong enough to keep you from going. Good candidate for the Darwin award.