That end no way can contain the USB-PD mode selection. It could possibly hold a resistor.
Anker certainly can make a system where you buy one cable and it has a set of ends, but it would look physically totally different.
These are not big enough to have a DC-DC conversion go in within, at most they do a small amount of resistance down e.g. 20V to 19V. So you’re talking you’d have to use a Powercore / Powerport with a voltage out mode matching the laptops, e.g. a Powercore / Powerport with a 20V output mode would then offer 20V or 19V out the end.
It cannot do a buck-boost type in the size of the product in the photos, so you cannot put in say 9V 3A one end and get 20V 1A out the other.
Most people reading this will be thinking Watts, when what matters is Volts 1st, Amps 2nd. Volts determines does it work or not. For anything which works, Amps then determines how fast it is. So someone in the future will see a 45W laptop requirement and buy an Anker product 45w made up of 15V 3A and it the laptop needs 20V 2.25A so would not with this cable. Anker will have to be very clear with what Powercore/port products work with each cable due to the Voltage and no buck-boost DC-DC (other than a small step-down via resistor)