Metals normally crystallize when they cool, but stress builds up along the boundaries between crystals, which can lead to metal failure.
You guys managed to wake the engineer in me. Well, what should, I say, I find the article badly written. While stating technically correct points, it is misleading.
Glass structure is very strong but it's brittle. It's very strong because it doesn't have abnormalities and grains (so it doesn't have boundaries between the crystals which concentrate the stress) as the article says. Moreover, it is not so prone to corrosion and doesn't fatigue as much.
But for the same reason it is less elastic and it has little "give" because it won't deform plastically. And when it would fail, it would fail drastically and with no prior notice. In layman's terms, a wing made from metal glass would not deform if you happened to take too many G's, it would just break off.
Oh, and glass metal is not transparent. It would look like mercury. Cool nonetheless

So, don't plan on seeing planes made solely from metal glass. Still, there are parts in an airplane that it's properties would be beneficial and there are other materials, like ceramics that have these properties and have a place in aviation. Bad thing about metal glass is that it is still very dense. So it will be somewhat heavy to be first on list to be used in aviation.
Where I DO see metal glass being used is composite materials and think carbon fiber here. We already have metal reinforced with glass fibers, so why not metal glass fibers. Material technology is advancing and I'm sure they'll find a good use for metal glass as well. We'll just have to wait and see

Nerd mode OFF
