I am not entirely sure how do AoA indicators work, but would they be operating in such conditions? Because I see them as quite a handy way of monitoring aircraft speed in comparison to actuall stall speed...
Depends on the aircraft. On the CRJ the AOA indicator determines where our green line (1.3 Vs1) and our lower red checkerboard (Vs1) are. (Vs1 is your stall speed in a given configuration) The airbus is another class cockpit aircraft, so it would likely appear the same way. However, in cruise you are unlikely to be in an area where the lower checkerboard would normally appear. The AOA range that gives your your checkerboard and green line values is adjusted as you change configuration, as you'll have a much higher AOA with full flaps before you stall vs a clean wing. These indications, as well as rate of pitch change (trend monitoring) determine when various aspects of the stall protection system come into play.
On steam guage aircraft, the AOA is used primarily for the stall protection system, although I believe many aircraft have an actual AOA indicator (we don't on the CRJ).
Useful information, but not as easy to just look at and be able to eyeball your speed. As we get to high altitudes, stall speed actually increases (just as Vmo indicated decreases). When dealing with highspeed aircraft this is referred to as "coffin corner" as your MMo (mach max operating) and Vs start to converge. I remember reading that the U2 at it's high altitude cruise has a 10 knot margin for airspeed between stall and MMo.
Coffin corner is a dangerous place to operate in for a number of reasons. First, as you turn your stall speed increases due to the increased aircraft loading. So if you are far enough into this corner, you can turn and cause your stall speed to exceed your MMo quite easily. This is only relevent because the increasing stall speed means that your "green line" ends up still being close to your indicated airspeed as you get to high altitudes. Airliners do not tend to operate in ranges where the corner is nearly so "tight" although we do start restricting bank angle as we climb for this reason. In our case at high altitudes our bank angle is restricted to 15 degrees, somewhat like we restrict our angle to 15 degrees when we are below ref +10 on approach or below V2+10 on climbout (only really relevent in single engine operations when we need to maintain V2 for obstacle clearance).