He finished the assignment in twenty minutes. Usually, after finishing homework, he’d feel a sense of hollow relief. But tonight, as he snapped his notebook shut, he felt a spark of genuine confidence.
“The 10% rule,” Anton muttered, his pen slowing down. He looked back at his textbook. For the first time all night, the diagrams of carbon cycles and energy pyramids actually made sense. The online guide acted like a translator for the dense academic language of Chernova and Galushin.
As he began to transcribe the logic into his notebook, something strange happened. Instead of just copying the words, he found himself actually reading the explanation. The GDZ hadn't just given the answer; it explained why the energy flow in the food chain decreased at each level.
The search results bloomed instantly—a digital lifeline. He clicked the first link. There it was: the layout of the textbook mirrored on his screen. He scrolled down to Section 4, Exercise 3. The solution was laid out in neat, digital type.