The ability to display both V and I at the same time is nice in theory, but not sure if it is practical. First, you need to be able to attach multiple leads to your circuit, and second, most important, chances are that the V and the I would be measured using different ranges. I'm not sure about the Fluke and Keithley, but according to the manual, the 34450A performs the two measurements by switching back and forth. If this involves different ranges, the relays will switch back and forth, which I presume will impact the measurement accuracy and speed. Any experience with doing these measurements in practical use?
On most of bench meters (and probably even on reasonable handheld ones) there is no need to switch any physical switch when going between current and voltage measurements. On 34401 going between current (except 3A, because 3A range relay also switches in current source for R measurements) and voltage ranges involves switching two MOS switches in the input switching hybrid (U101 in service manual). And actually the thing by default does moral equivalent of switching ranges between each sample - "autozero", which involves measuring voltage on input shorted by 100k resistor to ground.
It is truly surprising how simple the 34401A's input circuitry is (essentially whole real input range switching is on sheet 2 of schematics). You essentially get two ranges each for I (5R an 0R01 shunts) and U (small voltages going through few series high-value protection resistors and large voltages going through 9M9:0M1 divider, with both connected at once for "low" impedance mode) and any other ranges are done by adjusting gain of input amplifier after that (U106 and discrete JFET pair U104, with another pins of U101 used for changing divider ratio in its feedback network). Notice that you only have 3 relevant (ie. ignoring K101) relays in this whole mechanism. But because K102 serves dual purpose of switching current ranges and measurement current source for R ranges it is not exactly practical to measure U and I at once, but only slight redesign (probably without any additional components) will enable that, and without any relay clicking between samples.
On the other hand, I would like to not only be measuring U and I at once but also RMS power, which seems to not be practical by switching inputs of relatively slow ADC.