You reach for the package in front of your door and bring it inside, a bit suspicious. It seems slightly heavy for photo editing software. The box itself is a regular old cardboard box, but the mailing label says "TheMagicStore.com," a company you never heard of before this purchase, but when you were trying to find some cheap but usable software online, it popped up. Actually, the product popped up when you searched for "scanning" and "morphing." You wanted something that would let you scan in photos and digitally alter them. Not for any job or nefarious purpose, just as a hobby.
"Scan-N-Morph." Sounded right on point. Except you thought it would just be a disc, or maybe even just a code so you could download software off the website, like normal apps nowadays. Even if it had cables or an extra device, you figured it would be something small. What the heck was this?
It looked almost like one of those new folding tablet phones you had heard rumors of on the net. You would almost think it was a Star Trek tricorder prop. How would this edit photos? Could you only edit photos you took with the device itself? What a rip.
Well, you'd already opened it. Maybe you should try it out first before fighting with the online company for a refund. You turn on the power button, and the screen lights up with the logo (Scan-N-Morph), and you hear the tones indicating the device is active. Now, what should you take a picture of first?