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There are no monitors requiring VirtualLink. Any type-C monitor should work with any laptop with a type-C output with DP alt mode support. All laptop USB-C connectors should be able to deliver 15W of power to peripheral devices (as that's what the USB-C spec requires), which is what these monitors are built for.As for using anything like this as a primary monitor: a monitor is a monitor. Anything connected to a PC and recognized as a monitor can be a primary, secondary, tertiary - or whatever - monitor. An exception might be DisplayLink-type USB (type A) video adapters, but I've used even some of those "headless" (i.e. without a graphics card) in a couple of settings, and those are rather rare these days with type-C handling native DP output.
There are no monitors requiring VirtualLink. Any type-C monitor should work with any laptop with a type-C output with DP alt mode support. All laptop USB-C connectors should be able to deliver 15W of power to peripheral devices (as that's what the USB-C spec requires), which is what these monitors are built for.
As for using anything like this as a primary monitor: a monitor is a monitor. Anything connected to a PC and recognized as a monitor can be a primary, secondary, tertiary - or whatever - monitor. An exception might be DisplayLink-type USB (type A) video adapters, but I've used even some of those "headless" (i.e. without a graphics card) in a couple of settings, and those are rather rare these days with type-C handling native DP output.