  Hey fizyxx, Mahajan's good. I took E&M with him. As for the rest, I have managed to escape "the tripple B".
Mike Cowan rocks, so does Don H. Nice problem Mo! Here's one more for ya guys. It's called "the snow plow problem" It's winter, and it's snowing all day long at a constant rate (you can already smell differentiation eh? ) The snow plow starts plowing at noon. It goes 2 km in the first hour and 1 km in the second hour.
Question: When did it start snowing? Huh! Do you want to know the answer? 11:23 AM !!! :))) It's CAL 3. Here's some stuff I've read recently. I think it makes perfect sense. How can you become known as a person who consistently demonstrates excellence? [...] Motivation is required for excellence. [...]Motivation is what we like to do naturally. It's like being right or left-handed. We don't even think about it. We just write. The same is true for people known for excellence.
They have a group of motivations that work in concert to help them perform at a higher level. Like all motivations, these were inborn and are as much a part of them as their eye color or their height. The best we can be with low motivation is adequate . No matter how hard we work and desire it, in the long run we will never be excellent at something without high levels of motivation in that area.
In other words, if we toil in areas where we have low motivation, we resign ourselves to mediocrity. But who wants to be mediocre? Who wants to be known as "adequate"? 
