Sure, they weren’t that formal, but they were weddings in the West where loafers were appropriate, so it depends heavily on the wedding itself. That being said OP has clarified that this wedding is black tie optional, so loafers wouldn’t be.
- 0 Posts
- 13 Comments
I think machine compatibility plays a huge role, some machines do mostly ‘just work’ while others are a pain. It also definitely requires some tinkering, though mostly on setup or on the first week or two in my experience.
Also, ymmv and a lot of people swear by them but I’ve never had good luck with Ubuntu based distro, they’ve always been super buggy with hard to track fixes for me. I like fedora a lot better and it similarly has decent (though not nearly as extensive) community support for weird bugs, but I know people swear by many things.
Not technically loafers but opera pumps would also be appropriate–though a big statement these days–with a tuxedo, if OP is determined to have slip ons
That’s how it’s supposed to be but at least in the US except in very specific crowds the decisions have blurred considerably/aren’t known
Eh, I’ve worn loafers to two weddings and been plenty formal. One was at a camp and one was in a barn though, so it depends heavily on context.
noodles@slrpnk.netto Technology@beehaw.org•Framework is teasing a ‘big’ update for August 26th — could it be Framework 16?4·13 days agoYeah, I’ve had one hardware glitch that support sent me a detailed video how to fix by resetting the mainboard within a few hours of writing them, fixed it within 10 minutes. Other than that any issues I’ve had are linux-funkiness, like odd sound profiles on the speakers that I could fix myself, and have been gradually taken care of through updates along the way.
Taller, worse station wagons since the extra height dramatically increases fuel consumption and rates of severe injury in crashes, while also making rolls more likely.
noodles@slrpnk.netto 196@lemmy.blahaj.zone•Gonna predict the future and say that Taylor Swift's army of lawyers are going to have a great weekEnglish161·28 days agoNo, but it does play a pretty significant role in how much influence they have to control AI
noodles@slrpnk.netto politics @lemmy.world•California moves to dismantle GOP map — and Trump’s grip42·29 days agoWhile true we’re also in the ‘do literally anything you can to stop or stall the fascists"’ stage and this denies a greater Republican controlled house
Not unless you want to be halfway competent at both, rather than well-qualified and hireable for either. Genetic engineering in particular is a rapidly evolving field, and if you take tons of extra time to complete your degree (or finish and then work as an electrician or something else for 5 years) what you learned at the beginning probably won’t be more relevant than any other wet science experience. As the first response said, what’s important is that you demonstrate that you can self-motivate and learn. Any biology related bachelor degree should help you get your foot in the door of any biological or even chemical science job–you’ll have to sell yourself to a greater or lesser degree, but you have to do that for a job interview anyway.
All that a second qualification, whether that’s electrician, plumber, stenographer, etc. would do for you is make it more likely that your lifetime career will be that secondary qualification. If that’s what you want then why bother with genetic engineering, and if it’s not then fast-track genetic engineering and know that if you need a bridge job it’ll be at a lower salary, but that you’ll be getting your main job earlier in life so it’ll even out.
noodles@slrpnk.netto A Boring Dystopia@lemmy.world•Here’s why there are so few new cars for under $30,000321·1 month agoUsed to be true, not consistently so since COVID or so. I had to buy a car about two years ago and brand new cars with full warranties were only $1-2k more and with better financing offers than 2-4 year used cars with limited warranties. It got better for a bit but apparently used car prices are spiking again
noodles@slrpnk.netto Ubuntu Linux@lemmy.ml•Why is there so much hate on Ubuntu from the wider Linux community and is any of it justified?3·2 months agoPersonal experience but I’ve found that Ubuntu breaks far more easily if I’m doing anything nonstandard, and doing nonstandard things is the whole reason I’m on Linux. Probably this is because of snaps, but as a new user it’s hard to tell where things were installed and how. Switched to fedora and had a lot more success and didn’t go back, so maybe as a power user I’d be able to figure it out more, but not worth it imo.
That’s amazing but I think you’re in the minority