
The photo below of my home office desk setup shows this in action. In addition, Intel has made it easier to change which display is the Primary (or ‘Main’) display and the whether the displays are extensions or duplicates of the desktop by clicking on the ellipsis button (three dots) on each display: The resolution, refresh rate and scaling settings are laid out in a logical manner within a single window, while the Display Settings application makes these harder to find across different windows. In the example screenshot above, display number three and display number two are displays directly connected to my desktop system while display number one is a HDMI display connected via our UGA-3000 adapter.īesides the new ability to recognize DisplayLink-attached displays, the Graphics Command Center application appears to be better organized compared to the Windows Display Settings Application. When using the Intel Graphics Command Center application, DisplayLink-connected displays are recognized in addition to any other attached displays: This previous limitation has been removed with the Intel's recent release of the Intel Graphics Command Center application for Windows 10 version 1709 or higher.

Some of our customers find this utility somewhat confusing, and alternative third-party software configuration utilities from other manufacturers such as AMD, Intel and Nvidia were not designed to recognize or configure DisplayLink-connected displays, so they could not be used. Previously when adding these devices to a Windows 10 system, the attached displays had to be configured via the built-in Windows Display Settings application. Some examples are our popular UD-3900 dock and our UGA-3000 adapter.

At Plugable, we make a lot of different products based on DisplayLink technology that allow you to connect additional external displays to a Windows system via a USB connection.
