Pair of Apple Watches survive for two weeks at bottom of lake

A pair of Apple Watches was recently recovered in perfectly fine working condition in Connecticut, where they’d spent two weeks at the bottom of a lake in one of the more remarkable stories we’ve seen so far about the resilience of Apple’s signature wearable device.

The Apple Watch Series 4 is designed to be able to withstand water at a depth of up to 50 meters (164 feet). That helps explain why a police dive team in Brookfield, Connecticut, was able to find the pair of Apple Watches in good condition while conducting a routine training exercise. Afterward, they showed off their find on Twitter.

(Strange fact: This is actually not the first time Apple Watches have been recovered from that lake.)

Perhaps surprisingly, this is only “one of” the more remarkable examples of how resilient the watch is. Earlier this year, in an even more dramatic recovery than this one, a surfer from Huntington Beach, Calif., recovered his Apple Watch a whopping six months after it fell into the ocean.

Not only is the watch resilient, but it’s also pretty much unassailably dominant — in its product category, that is.

According to new data from Strategy Analytics, Apple shipped 5.7 million watches during the second quarter of this year. That’s up a full 50 percent year-over-year, compared to 3.8 million watches during the same period in 2018.

Moreover, Apple’s share of the smartwatch market is now close to 50 percent, up from 44 percent during the same quarter last year.

“Apple Watch remains a long way ahead of the chasing pack,” Strategy Analytics executive director Neil Mawston said in a statement about the numbers, adding that it’s “fended off strong competition from hungry rivals” and “remains the clear smartwatch market leader.”

Samsung and Fitbit are in second and third place, respectively, after Apple in the smartwatch category when ranked by market share, according to the Strategy Analytics data.

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