...based on your quoted description, I don't think you understand what I am suggesting. I am not suggesting integrating the voltage, multiplying it by i, and then integrating *that* a second time, because that would just be completely wrong...
integrating the voltage --> int 10 + t/2 from 0 to 4 = 4*[10t + t^2/4] = 44
multiplying it by i --> 44 * 3 = 132
integrating *that* a second time --> int 132 from 0 to 3600 = 3600*[132] = 475.2kJ
There was only a very slight problem with the OP's math and I was trying to work through it in a way that would (hopefully) show the problem, rather than say what the problem is and risk having the OP not actually understand, and then make the same mistake again, which seems to be quite common when people say they understand.
You integrate v(t) once and you have your answer (at which point you just have to be careful about units when plugging in the numbers). It's simple and it doesn't require the EXTRA step of computing the average voltage, which accomplishes nothing.
Well, the OP made a minor slip up with units and plugging in numbers, because it's not simple. Taking the extra steps to look at it in depth (hopefully) showed the problem, and hopefully it won't be made again. This accomplishes something, I believe.
I found when I was in university, that If I did the quick and easy math and made a simple mistake, I wouldn't get as many marks as compared to longer versions where the markers could see a simple mistake and the propagation of errors.
I also think that sometimes people who have been doing things for a long time can overlook the difficulty of doing things when you haven't mastered them, and it is generally better to do math with examples showing excruciating detail, rather than make the assumption that someone knows something and have them state at the end that they understand, because of terms such as 'its simple', 'its obvious' or 'its easy'.
So while this thread is over, please accept that there are many routes to the final goal, and doing things faster is not necessarily always the best thing, especially if you don't
understand what is going on (I certainly don't most of the time

).