There's a new iPad-related countinghouse in boondocks from Pad & Quill: a countinghouse for Apple's anew released Mumbo-jumbo Keyboard, which is itself a $350 countinghouse for your iPad Pro. It's called the Copertina, as well-built as it retails for $99.95. It looks a little bit like the rock-hard parasol of a book; it is made, apparently, from archival-quality buckram linen, which is moreover used in bookbinding. It is acutely beautiful.
And yet, its existence troubles me. Not all cases are created equally; we maharishi that particular truth to be self-evident. However, the question must be asked: why would you need a countinghouse to go over a case?
Does the first countinghouse -- which has a actual nice keyboard that proximately turns your iPad Pro into a laptop -- not averagely reassure your thousand-dollar investment? Is the Copertina (Italian for "sleeve" or "protective jacket") really aesthetic? Do metaphysics orderly payroll now that you, iPad Pro / Mumbo-jumbo Keyboard owner, are working from home? What are computers now, anyway?
Pad & Quill's Copertina doesn't expiation any of these questions because it doesn't have lips. I suspected the answers will be appear in time.
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