In hindsight, and seeing other hub reviews, feedback, they should offer a bundle with the other parts to make that photo of imagined use case viable.
They’ll need to be an above average USB-PD charger to power the hub with enough spare power to pass-thru to the ipad, so a charger higher than the one an iPad needs.
Then the display and other devices, that looks like a Powerstrip opportunity, so again, does one of their Powerstrips have high enough USB-PD port to be the above PD hub input?
What the photo is not showing is the iPad battery is draining fast and there’s no USB-PD input to the hub.
The lack of a bundle will simply cause the power problem to be in negative reviews, the 38W thing will not be understood by majority of consumers who will for example plug in the ipad’s charger and complain the ipad battery is draining. The bundled iPad charger is 18W, less than 38W so most people by default will find the hub does not work.
The simplest way for Anker to head off, solve preemptively, is to edit the Amazon listing to point explicitly to recommend one of their Powerstrip or Powerport towards the higher end of Power. They’d make more $$ too. Or to add a new SKU with a bundle.
Think it through. You have this:
Combined with this:
Means by my calculation you’ll need a minimum 65W to have both highest speed iPad charging and power the hub with peripherals?
So this?
I’m not seeing a Powerstrip with 65W PD? The most powerful shipping has 45W, so not enough.
So that’s my recommendation, point to and/or bundle the 60W charger so users of the hub get maximum benefit.