Solving any Math problems for $.2

<p>I'll solve any math problem for $.2, at least 5 problems I assume. Quickly and guaranteed quality.</p>

<p>Lets put aside the fact that you're trolling and look at what you're saying.
You'll solve 5 math problems for a dollar, and these are college-level math problems. You do realize that solving 5 difficult math problems could potentially take anywhere between 20 minutes and 3/4 hours.
And you're good at math?!?!?</p>

<p>Yes, I am from Russia and 20 cent is great money for me!</p>

<p>Nyet!!!!!!</p>

<p>P=NP
Navier-Stokes
Riemann Hypothesis
Yang Mills
Birch and Swinnerton-Dyer</p>

<p>I'll take solutions to those 5 problems for a dollar kthx.</p>

<p>


</p>

<p>In Soviet Russia, math problem solves YOU!</p>

<p>


</p>

<p>Oh my god, I nearly fell off my chair laughing... good old Russian reversal.</p>

<p>Йыовое еш ыооп уреую ещлы шулрвлао-тф щлфнерышф?</p>

<p>20 сзтеы?!</p>

<p>I LLLOOVEE the soviet reversal technique hahaha</p>

<p>LOL same here.</p>

<p>"In communist Russia, the internet downloads you"</p>

<p>my math prof last quarter was russian w/ thick accent. russians will own you at mathematics.</p>

<p>Йыовое еш ыооп уреую ещлы шулрвлао-тф щлфнерышф?</p>

<p>20 сзтеы?!</p>

<p>???? what the??</p>

<p>
[quote]
my math prof last quarter was russian w/ thick accent. russians will own you at mathematics.

[/quote]
</p>

<p>my russian math professor last semester (as opposed to my russian math professor this semester) didnt have a think accent because he didnt speak english. he just paced back and forth, stared at a side wall/the board, made a strange high-pitched 'eh' sound... and developed some of the most beautiful proofs ive seen.</p>

<p>great class.</p>

<p>I have Russian roots too. My mother is Russian. And my father is Russian as well. Also, I was born in Russia. </p>

<p>[anyone who will call this a funny abracadabra will get eaten by Russian bear -- it is Russian language] </p>

<p>Превед медведы. </p>

<p>
[quote]
I'll take solutions to those 5 problems for a dollar kthx.

[/quote]

I'll give ten bucks for those problems.</p>

<p>I've got one for ya:</p>

<p>Find the general solution for y(x) -</p>

<p>y'(x) = (y/x) - x^5 + x^3*y^2</p>

<p>Enjoy.</p>

<p>my Russian calculus II professor with a thick accent last semester essentially put us through integral boot camp. he was an intense guy....probably more so than any professor i've had since coming to college.</p>

<p>he pretty much showed us proofs to let us know he owned us.</p>

<p>Just wondering. How are you proposing that people get the money to you?
Surely your not suggesting $1 PayPal transactions?</p>

<p>"my Russian calculus II professor with a thick accent last semester essentially put us through integral boot camp. he was an intense guy....probably more so than any professor i've had since coming to college.</p>

<p>he pretty much showed us proofs to let us know he owned us."</p>

<p>I heard about a professor at some Ivy league school (who I believe was Russian) who pretty much presupposed the knowledge of differential forms when he taught calc II. Differential forms are supposed to come a little bit later than that (sometime in grad school for most people).</p>

<p>I had a class where the professor didn't think the book did a good enough job at treating the material, and he wanted to do things in the most general sense possible. For the second semester, I think I had at least 100 pages of handwritten notes (and I write small), 100 pages of homework, over 400 pages of handouts, and in theory I should've had another 20 pages of notes had I written things down at the weekly "optional problem session", which was really our grader giving an additional lecture on tangential topics.</p>

<p>^ geez, that's intense...</p>

<p>yeah, when the 3 or 4 other calc II professors spent the first 3 weeks of class reviewing old calculus (which would have been great for me, being more than 4 months without doing serious calculus), he jumped right into new material. he then spent the last 3 weeks of class proving Euler's constant, the gamma function for factorials, and God knows what else...i didn't even bother to take notes for the whole of three weeks and still got away from that class with an A.</p>

<p>Wait, how is that intense? I'm a junior in Analysis and I had around 150 pages of notes the first semester.....and they were mandatory because we got a grade on them.....homework around 300 pages..... so yeah that's not intense at all considering he is in college.</p>