On Sunday, game developer Seanathan Bates discovered a working iPhone that fell 16,000 from Alaska Airlines flight 1282 on Friday.
The iPhone wasn't injured, either—still unlocked and with a torn charging cable connector plugged in, it appeared largely undamaged and displayed information that matched the flight.
After the discovery, Bates contacted the National Transportation Safety Board, which took possession of the device and told him the iPhone was the second phone that had been found from the flight.
During a press conference on Sunday, NTSB chair Jennifer Homendy confirmed that two people had discovered cell phones that fell from flight 1281.
Given air resistance that limits an object's descent speed and landings in a soft spot like moist dirt or mud, the survivals aren't entirely surprising.
Compared to the apparent ease of discovering two small cell phones first, a Hacker News commenter quipped, "Boeing needs 'Find My Door.'"
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It's not really that unbelievable. It reaches terminal velocity and stops getting faster, it lands on a soft surface, it's in a case, with a screen protector.