• Apple Watch

Apple Watch (Photo : Reuters)

People would blend an apple, but how about an Apple Watch? One video blogger (vlogger) conducted an experiment to learn what would happen after putting the gadget in a Blendtec blender. The result was a mass of tiny dust particles and metal scraps.

The YouTube video on the show "Will It Blend?" includes the standard warning for experiments in the media. That message is not to "try" the experiment at home.

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In the video, Apple's computerized voice from Siri also lightheartedly warns that the Apple Watch is a "work of art," according to The Telegraph. It should be worn on a person's wrist, instead of being placed in a Blendtec.

The experimenter Tom Dickson replies that there is no other method to answer the question "Will it blend?" He then presses the start button to launch the experiment.

The show's one-time "guest" could be recognized even as components of the Apple Watch started to fly off. However, after the blender demolished the Apple Watch the result was something that resembled ashes, according to Cult of Mac.

Dickson is the founder of the blender company Blendtec. He referred to the results as "Siri smoke."

Siri is the name of part of Apple's iOS, which functions as an intelligent personal assistant. Dickson's statement also refers to a 1958 incident involving Italian Cardinal Giuseppe Siri, in which white smoke that rolled out of the Vatican's papal meeting turned black.  

Dickson has already blended several other Apple products on his YouTube show. After he mentions that Apple could manufacture a self-driving car, he jokingly says that he can "deal" with it.

Blendtec, founded in 1975, sells both home and professional blenders. The company's "Will It Blend?" campaign has blended other items, such as marbles, golf balls, and iPhones.