It began with a few dropped internet connections. Before long, some websites were persistently unavailable. For eBay sellers, things reached a crisis point when they found themselves unable to flog existing items or list new ones, and they started voicing their displeasure on social media.
The next day, breathless headlines informed us that Tuesday's outages were a consequence of the internet being "full up". It had, apparently, burst its digital zip. "Well, that seems rather serious," we thought to ourselves, trying to picture what on earth that meant in practice but failing to do so.
Our reliance on the internet, whether direct or indirect, is almost total, while our ignorance of the way it works is similarly all-encompassing. But that's hardly surprising. The chasm between the simple interfaces that we use daily and the sophisticated back-end technology that powers them is growing ever greater. We unquestioningly click on a friendly blue "log in" button, with no knowledge of, or indeed interest in, the complex procedures that deliver a "welcome" screen a couple of seconds later. We operate entirely on a "don't need to know" basis. In truth, we have little choice in the matter, but that suits us fine. Until something goes wrong.
Some attempts in the media to explain what happened on Tuesday were akin to the much-mocked remarks by former US Senator Ted Stevens, when he described the internet as a "series of tubes".