To what degree I understand the theory (if indeed it works), this drive wouldn't actually violate conservation of momentum. It provides force by projecting an electromagnetic field which pushes against non-classical matter; a fluid of charged Virtual Particles that blink in and out of existence according to Perturbation Theory. So instead of ejecting matter to push it along as with traditional thrusters, this pushes against a sort of matter that permeates the universe, but exists for so short a time span that it's not something we can easily observe.
The tiny amount of thrust NASA seems to have produced using this is much less than was claimed to have been generated in previous tests with similar thrusters, which could just be an issue of the scale of the test thruster. I think Roger Shawyer, who first developed the concept, saw people using arrays of them to drive atmospheric aircraft, ground vehicles, and so on... in the "This will revolutionize EVERYTHING!" sort of way. Mostly, I am excited about being able to convert any source of electricity, like radioactive decay, solar energy, etc. into thrust without having to worry about fuel. It could enable extremely deep-space exploration, much lighter spacecraft, and bring us a step closer to figuring out what's going on in the universe at a quantum level.
If it works, I motion that we call it Impulse Power, in part because it generates force as if spontaneously... but mostly because Star Trek.