I've been watching this thread and getting a good chuckle out of many of the comments as well as Ride1Up's marketing statements.
The idea that a power (wattage/amps whatever) based cadence sensed PAS setup is somehow new is a bit humorous. This has been the default how a Grin Cycle Analyst (CA) has implemented PAS control for many many years. In addition to limiting the wattage to the motor for each PAS level selected the CA also ramps the power so the cadence sensor doesn't feel just like an ON/OFF switch. The CA also works in much the same way when the input is a torque sensor.
This capability is the default how a CA comes these days (and has for quite a while, at least AFAIK as long as the RtR or Ready to Run kits have been offered), and doesn't despite PCeBiker's suggestion require any cords or programming experience (at least I think this is what is being referred to).
While not quite as smooth, "natural", or graduated as a torque sensor's input, the CA's management of the cadence input provides a riding experience that is somewhere in between the poor PAS implementations that are so prevalent and a full on torque sensor setup. This makes a cadence PAS a simple, inexpensive (vs a BB torque sensor) setup offering a very bicycle like riding experience. I've never understood why more ebike controllers haven't offered the power rather than speed based programming.
So not only is it possible, it's been done for years and years and is nothing new at all.
Really interesting IMHO beyond the CA managing a torque sensor input in much the same way as it handles the cadence based PAS is the addition of regen braking (hub motor dependent) based on the rotation of the crank (pedalling backwards) to initiate progressive braking much like a coaster brake setup. I can see this idea used on a really simple cruiser/around town style bike with very minimal ebike characteristics (integrated batteries, no or very limited display, torque sensing, internal wiring, no external add on sensors and a small diameter hub motor) and perhaps only a front brake lever. To me
that would be something new and interesting.