I hate it when wolfram alpha agrees with me and the practice test disagrees. If dy/dx=-(2x(y^2)+2y)/(2(x^2)y+2x), doesn't dy/dx=-y/x thus making y=C/x? Practice test says that makes x(y^2)+y+((x^2)y+x)y'=0, forcing me to go the route of finding N and M to be exact, deriving Psi, which ends up ((x^2)(y^2)/2)+xy=C... WHAT
derivatives.... *vomits* Most of it is easy, some of it (the most common kind in textbooks) are effing hard.
Calc I was a breeze Calc II was obnoxious Calc III was a ***** Diff Eq is back to obnoxious Oh and I found this gem on stumbleupon
Hey look, dubstep played on real instruments. Skrillex - Scary Monsters And Nice Sprites (Live Cover by Pinn Panelle) - YouTube
Except the part where that does not even sound like dubstep. My only real problem with the genre is that it's just some dude in front of a computer doing something anyone can learn to do in a few months if not days. What the guys in the vid I posted are doing takes the time to not only learn the base instruments but then also learn about all the things they have addded to those. (Theremon linked into the guitars as an electronic wammie bar, ****ing awesome) And are actually entertaining to watch and not just some crazy laser stuff to hide the fact that all the 'performer' did was press play on his laptop.