The 9680 had - for its time - excellent TV-out that just resampled whatever you were doing on VGA to the PAL composite output.
I was never one to watch computer stuff on big screen TVs (instead I had a huge 24" widescreen CRT monitor and used TV-in on the PC for that), but i had a niche application that needed TV-out: I had disassembled a 1970s vintage video camera, which had a 3" mono CRT as viewfinder. At the time all kinds of LED and LCD status indicators for 5.25" slots were all the rage, so both to poke fun at that and beat them at their own game, I mounted the 3" CRT in two 5.25" slots in my ATX bigtower and tried to put some info there. It took a composite feed, with three wires (+12V, composite video and GND), so hooked two up to a molex and jury-rigged a cinch IEC connector to the composite and GND lines. TLDR: it worked. But getting my Windows XP desktop sensibly extended there without screwing up my main display (1600x900@85Hz on that 24" CRT) proved a challenge. I can't remember exactly what main VGA I was running at the time - probably either a Matrox G450 or some or other GeForce MX - but I just couldn't get the TV-out to do what I wanted.
Then I stuck that 9680 in the system and it just worked. Nothing fancy, just 2D - but as nicely rendered as possible on an even then >25-year old 3" mini display, and not impacting my main display at all. So not sexy, but very useful in a specific niche.