I don't think xab9 is denying that your wife made you a better person and see things in a different light. That's awesome and you should be proud of her. But your comments keep showing a form of dependancy that can quickly spiral out of control and turn against you (personally I have been there). A psychologist can be a tremendous help in preventing such situations.
Like xab9's comment, please do not take offence in my comment either.
I would say, ignore both of them (the HNers advising you above in good earnest). You will cross that bridge if/when there is a need. The disruption to a happy phase can come in various guises. Don't mend if it ain't broke, they say. Also make hay while the sun shines & may be it will shine longer.
Yes, that's why I said his call - I'm just a random stranger (no expert, no family member, no good friend etc), the weight of the things I say is close to zero and this is fine.
On the other hand sometimes it may be good to have a pillow to soften a fall. If nothing happens, I spent that money on myself, no big deal, but if a tragedy happens out of the blue then it may save his life. It saved mine.
I understand. And that's why even in my post I said 'good earnest'. But I feared by OP's last comment that he was beginning to take the advise seriously. So I thought my duty to put an affirming point.
perfect opportunity for Apple to introduce iPants.
Joke aside, this is something that Apple needs to quickly address without putting customers at fault. You cannot just tell the customers not to put their phones in their pocket.
> Joke aside, this is something that Apple needs to quickly address without putting customers at fault. You cannot just tell the customers not to put their phones in their pocket.
They cannot address the issues for existing devices and all devices that are in the pipeline. Users on backorder could cancel their orders, but most won't do that, so why should they bother? In a year people will be joking about not buying first generation Apple devices and that's it.
"So why would this be interesting for HN readers?"
To show what you can do with AngularJS directives and that combining it with D3.js it can be quite powerful (even without source code).
Anybody who worked with D3.js, should know how much boilerplate code needs to be written to have a visualisation. By abstracting that code in directives, it allows users to use out-of-the-box d3.js graphs. Someone could go ever further to implement an "interface" to customize these graphs through angularjs.
To anyone who's interested: I replied to another comment with a tutorial blog of how to create d3.js directives
Like xab9's comment, please do not take offence in my comment either.