Good afternoon! I have an idea of a new product name for you. I have a few degrees in Marketing and every once in a while I stumble on some cool idea I think
We'll see what your forum group thinks 
I think you should call the new Glass Cockpit from Dynon - ICE-9
as in complete solid-state glass in 2009! What do you think? JO
Here is the formal definition of Ice-9 on Wikipedia....
Ice-nine is a fictional material conceived by writer Kurt Vonnegut in his novel Cat's Cradle. It is supposed to be a more stable polymorph of water than common ice (Ice Ih) which instead of melting at 0° Celsius (32° Fahrenheit), melts at 45.8°C (114.4°F). When ice-nine comes into contact with liquid water below 45.8°C (which is thus effectively supercooled), it acts as a seed crystal, and causes the solidification of the entire body of water which quickly crystallizes as ice-nine. This occurs at the end of the novel, when all the oceans are frozen to ice-nine (in reality, even if there were such a thing as ice-nine, adding a crystal seed to a supercooled liquid can never cause the entire liquid to freeze, because the latent heat released by freezing exceeds that needed to heat the liquid up to the melting point[1] — i.e., the effect of seeding the oceans with a crystal of ice-nine would be to heat them up to 45.8°C while freezing only a fraction of the water).
I think you should call the new Glass Cockpit from Dynon - ICE-9
as in complete solid-state glass in 2009! What do you think? JO
Here is the formal definition of Ice-9 on Wikipedia....
Ice-nine is a fictional material conceived by writer Kurt Vonnegut in his novel Cat's Cradle. It is supposed to be a more stable polymorph of water than common ice (Ice Ih) which instead of melting at 0° Celsius (32° Fahrenheit), melts at 45.8°C (114.4°F). When ice-nine comes into contact with liquid water below 45.8°C (which is thus effectively supercooled), it acts as a seed crystal, and causes the solidification of the entire body of water which quickly crystallizes as ice-nine. This occurs at the end of the novel, when all the oceans are frozen to ice-nine (in reality, even if there were such a thing as ice-nine, adding a crystal seed to a supercooled liquid can never cause the entire liquid to freeze, because the latent heat released by freezing exceeds that needed to heat the liquid up to the melting point[1] — i.e., the effect of seeding the oceans with a crystal of ice-nine would be to heat them up to 45.8°C while freezing only a fraction of the water).