This is different from the pie-in-the-sky battery chemistry technologies that we're used to hearing about. Zinc air, lithium air, Envia, etc .. all great things, all potentially very far away.
NTS's breakthrough claim is a way to cheaply and tightly package cylindrical cells in a way that they're very easy to individually monitor, control, and service. The original Zero bikes (2008-2011) used Molicel NMC lithium 26650 cells and the 2008-2011 Brammo Enertia used Valence LiFePO4 18650 cells, packaged into 6 sub-modules (UCharge U1-12XP).
Both Zero and Brammo have switched to pouch cells for their 2012 bikes.
Nissan, Chevy, Mitsubishi (IIRC) use pouch cells for their designs.
Honda used cylindrical NiMH until 2012. They are using prismatic lithium cells now.
Fisker uses A123 pouch cells for the Karma.
Toyota mostly uses Panasonic prismatic NiMH for their closed-loop hybrids, though the Prius V uses lithium-ion in Japan and Europe. Toyota is
using what appears to be prismatic Panasonic lithium cells in the plug-in Prius.
Hyundai uses LG pouch cells for the Sonata Hybrid.
Ford will use similar prismatic Panasonic lithium cells for the Focus EV and Fusion plug-in.
Tesla is the only manufacturer that I'm aware of using cylindrical cells .. the same Panasonic NCR18650 that Neil Saiki references.
Tesla is the only car company truly doing clean-sheet EV designs. Even the Leaf is based off of a common platform, though like Tesla they package the batteries in the floor.
Does a pressure-fit mechanical interconnect suddenly swing battery technology in favor of cylindrical cells? I don't know, but it'll be fun to watch.