Oooh!
Oooh, it's the Frigidaire Frisbee-wash!
I saw one of these at Sears. I was surprised that Electrolux keeps marching on with that same system that our Frigidaire dishwasher has, with the wash-bottom/wash-top design. I noticed that the wash system appeared different in the Icon series (at least, superficially), and wondered if that would percolate down to the Frigidaire line. It appears that it hasn't, at least, not yet.
The self-cleaning filter works well, save for the glass trap insert that is forever trapping food particles between it and the sump body. I've gotten in the habit of scrubbing it clean every couple of loads.
The wash system seems satisfactory if unexciting. The wash arm is markedly shorter end-to-end than in our traditional-arm unit, but I suppose the idea is that the orbit disc does all the washing, and the linear portion of the arm is just there with a jet to propel it around. Reminds me of the old metal GE arms in the 70s with several staggered large holes on one side of the arm, and just one angled hole on the other.
Neither the old nor the new unit throws the water higher than the bottom of the top rack, so it relies on time to make up for pressure. I find that, with Cascade Platinum or any other really good detergent, the results are just fine, although you won't be reaching them in less than 80 minutes.
Poor detergent will produce an astonishingly lousy result, whereas the older machines that washed with force could compensate for that to a degree.
I agree that the twirligig designs have always met a bitter end when the twirlie fails to rotate properly, as evidenced by the Profile dishwashers and their short-lived twin small-arm design, which Yogi mentioned. The first time that orbit disc jams, the force needed to propel the arm won't be offset properly (notice in the video how the eccentric force of the water from the disc offsets the forward force of the propulsion jet just-so, such that the arm spends an increment washing each zone before advancing?), and you'll end up with some seriously skeezy dishes.