It's surprisingly vague - it covers the holders, installing Silverfast, and calibrating the focus (essentially you insert a neg, use a specific extra piece of software, it makes 11 scans, you pick the sharpest, then it calibrates to that) but not aspects like resolution modes etc. The modes it talks of are 'high resolution' at 5300ppi and 'default resolution' at 2650ppi but doesn't express what area these cover and/ or what the limitations thereof are. Doubly annoying to me is that if its default resolution is 2650ppi, they could have made it handle 4x5 too. Furthermore, I have a horrible suspicion that unless you scan mounted 35mm slides or 50x120 panoramics, you'll not be able to use the 5300ppi mode without losing image area. If that is the case, then it likely won't be long till a hi-res single 35mm strip carrier has to be offered.
I know this may be a controversial comment, but I've found myself actually almost wishing that they had designed a machine purely to deliver 2650ppi with the best possible focus, highly optimised MTF performance, 4x5 coverage, side by side simultaneous scanning etc, rather than necessarily chasing the pixel game. For a lot of what people need a film scanner for, it would likely do a superb job.