How about something like this?

The goal wouldn't be to prevent the impact entirely, but to reduce the impact velocity of the birdstrike enough (through multiple hits before it reached the engine) that the resulting ingestion into the fanblades might not be catastrophic.
There are planes that use similar curved intakes like this (stealth aircraft for example, so there's no direct line of sight to the non-stealthy engines to reflect RADAR), so I don't think it restricts the airflow so much as to be unfeasible.
It probably wouldn't prevent catastrophic failures entirely, but it might greatly reduce them. Plus it has other benefits like preventing foreign object ingestion on the ground, like keeping that guy on 'Lost' from getting sucked into the engine.
The cost of retrofitting existing aircraft with intakes of this type would be high but feasible.

The goal wouldn't be to prevent the impact entirely, but to reduce the impact velocity of the birdstrike enough (through multiple hits before it reached the engine) that the resulting ingestion into the fanblades might not be catastrophic.
There are planes that use similar curved intakes like this (stealth aircraft for example, so there's no direct line of sight to the non-stealthy engines to reflect RADAR), so I don't think it restricts the airflow so much as to be unfeasible.
It probably wouldn't prevent catastrophic failures entirely, but it might greatly reduce them. Plus it has other benefits like preventing foreign object ingestion on the ground, like keeping that guy on 'Lost' from getting sucked into the engine.
The cost of retrofitting existing aircraft with intakes of this type would be high but feasible.