Can't we already make kinetic impactors with conventional rockets?
Not very easily. Seriously, it's easier to make a nuclear device, Tsiolkovsky's Equation is a bitch. You need reaction mass to carry the payload, reaction mass to carry the reaction mass to carry the payload, reaction mass to carry the reaction mass to carry the reaction mass to carry the payload, so on and so forth.
If you want to consider "OMG, The sky is falling!", you are thinking too small.
Instead, imagine this:
We send a vehicle up that is basically just a big fission reactor, some landing gear, a guidance computer, and a shitload of these engines. We soft-land it on a large metallic asteroid. We activate the engines, and we move the asteroid out of orbit, and into a collision course with the earth. It may take a very long time to get it here, but it would eventually get here assuming sufficient energy reserves were sent with the thrusterpack.
To do this with conventional engines, we would need to spend literally hundreds of billions of dollars just on orbiting all the propellent needed to send to the asteroid. This makes it a non-starter as far as major world governments considering it as a showstopper WMD. However, with a genuine massless drive, and the absurd energy density of proper nuclear reactors (NOT little RTGs like is on Curiosity), It now becomes feasible to create such a plan, launch the vehicle, and then park the kinetic impactor at one the legrange points until the big red button is pushed.
Superfun times to be had by all on that day.
To me, though, the bigger curiosity is the laser interferometry data reported in their informal forum discussion linked earlier. The michaelson-moorley experiment famously showed that there is no cosmic aether, and specifically, that there is no aetheral wind. It looked for anomalies in interfermetric measurements from a split light beam, measured in multiple directions, while undergoing movement. It is famous for showing that even when moving, there is no deviation in the local speed of light. The interferometry data reported shows local deviation in the local speed of light when the device is active. That's where the alcubierre warp drive rhetoric is coming from. This indicates a pretty profound finding in and of itself. Screw propulsion, this is a very exciting thing if true.