Well, not even a
60-line Ann Arbor Ambassador can compete with a 120 line xterm with even higher-res fonts, so my desktop 4K LCD monitor is where I display the output of serial connections.
All my microcomputer video output is currently done on a
Sony PVM-9045Q monitor (sold as the 8045 in some countries). This is a very handy little unit, with relatively high resolution for a 9" colour monitor, composite, YUV, RGB and component video inputs (with separate sync input usable with any of these), and supporting NTSC, PAL, SECAM and NTSC 4.43 display formats. As well as not taking up much space in my tiny flat, it's small and light enough to bring out to meet-ups without too much trouble. I've been using just a little breadboarded resistor network to convert digital RGB video to analogue for it, but a friend of mine has a board design in the works to do a better job of that and handle RGBI.
For anybody who needs to display any form of 15.7 kHz video, it's well worth looking around for the more flexible CRT professional video monitors (PVMs) that happen to be up on auction sites in your area. They tend to be fairly common, cheap, and high quality. For 80-column display, though, you'll want to try to find one with 400 or more
TV lines of resolution, if you can. (This is easy for the larger monitors, but with the 9" ones a lot of them, such as the PVM-9042Q, are 250 lines.)
I also have a 9" monochrome monitor and 5" B/W TV, since I wanted a higher-resolution display than my colour display is capable of doing. (Colour display resolution is limited by the aperture grille or shadow mask.) Unfortunately, neither is working properly at the moment; they're both waiting for me to find the time and bravery to open them up and try to trace down the problem.