I got a 6095 tunze from the wife for christmas, and I love it. There's a few differences though that aren't mentioned on here
AC pumps have a brake feature, and are also prone to starting in reverse more common. This means cycling them fast for detritus removal or that pulsing flow to make your corals REALLY sway will shorten the life of the pump considerably.
While it is true what atreis said about the safety of ac blowing you back, the other side of the equation is the voltage behind it. My pump runs at a max of 24VDC, compared to my 120v AC going to the korallias that are already in there. Your skin acts as an insulator against voltage, and it's generally accepted that anything over 50v can overcome your skins insulation properties. DC current also only flows in one direction, it's ground to complete the source (not any path to ground like an ac pump) and considering each pump has it's own + and - leads right next to each other, chance of amperage to you is slim to none unless the cable is shorted and you stick your hand in. That's not the case with ac powered objects in the tank which can ground through you to the floor and subsequently to earth.
There's other benefits to this new pump though aside from that, but you actually get that on all the nanostream pumps now. It's the same footprint as my korallia 1400 and 750, however it's mounting options and angles are vastly superior (I used to think the korallia's gave good aiming where you want to put the flow, and I was totally wrong once I saw a tunze)
The controllability is a big point though. You simply can't make ac pumps do this type of work without some SERIOUSLY expensive hardware behind it. I priced VFD's to put on ac pumps, and it just wasn't cost effective by any means