Sounds like this really can output any wavelength, and it's not just a bunch of discrete lasers it selects among:
(from another article (nist.gov)):
Semiconductor lasers are very good at generating infrared light with a wavelength of 980 nanometers, or billionths of a meter. But emerging quantum technologies such as optical atomic clocks and quantum computers need laser light in many other colors as well.
The any-wavelength laser uses nonlinear optics — a set of materials and techniques that allow certain materials to absorb light of one color and output other colors. NIST researchers make their laser out of a material called tantala, based on the metallic element tantalum. Tantala is very good at guiding light waves with low losses and can convert incoming laser light at one wavelength into a large range of other light wavelengths.
Very cool to have a truly variable-wavelength light, AND for it to be a laser.
Yeah, this could be a really big deal depending on if it can scale in every wavelength and be multi-mode on-the-fly (ish).