Descarga Gratis De Solucionario De Quimica Inorganica Catherine Housecroft Rapidshare
She slammed the laptop shut. Defeat tasted like stale coffee and cheap instant noodles. She was going to fail.
The RapidShare link remained a ghost. A dead end in the history of the internet. But for Mariana, it had served its true purpose: not to give her the answers, but to make her desperate enough to find her own.
When the exam came, the first question was a complex ion with a twisted geometry. The second was a Born-Haber cycle she had dreamed about the night before. She slammed the laptop shut
She re-read the chapter. Not skimming, but reading. She looked at her wrong answer. And then, she saw it. She had misidentified the principal axis. It wasn't a C2 rotating along the z-axis; it was a C3 through the center of the molecule.
: Se encuentra disponible una versión en PDF del manual de soluciones bajo el título Inorganic-Chemistry-Solutions-Housecroft-Catherine Academia.edu The RapidShare link remained a ghost
She took a deep breath. She opened the laptop again, not to search for the stolen solution, but to look at her own work.
The file began to crawl into her hard drive. 1%... 3%... A weirdly peaceful blue bar inched across the screen. Outside her window, the real world faded—the barking dogs, the street vendor's horn. Inside, there was only the soft hum of the hard drive and the promise of salvation. When the exam came, the first question was
But then, she looked at the textbook. She looked at the open notebook where she had tried, and failed, to solve the first symmetry problem. She had spent two hours on that single question. And she had gotten it wrong.
She erased her work. She started over. For the next 36 hours, she drank terrible tea, chewed on pencil ends, and fought every single problem. She drew molecular orbitals. She balanced redox equations in acid and base. She learned to love the ligand field theory.
RapidShare. The name triggered a nostalgic pang in older students. Before Google Drive, before Dropbox, before Mega, there was RapidShare. A blue, utilitarian website where files lived or died based on how many people had clicked them in the last 30 days.