In situ fracture studies have been carried out on thin films of the NiTi intermetallic compound under plane stress, tensile loading conditions in the high-voltage electron microscope. Local stress-induced amorphization of regions directly in front of moving crack tips has been observed. The upper cutoff temperature, T-C-A(max), for the stress-induced crystalline-to-amorphous transformation was found to be 600 K, identical to that for heavy ion-induced amorphization of NiTi and for ion-beam mixing-induced amorphization of Ni and Ti multilayer specimens. 600 K is also both the lower cutoff temperature, T-A-C(min), for radiation-induced crystallization of initially-unrelaxed amorphous NiTi and the lowest isothermal annealing temperature, T-X(min), at which stress-induced amorphous NiTi crystallizes. Since T-X(min) should be T-K, the ideal glass transition temperature, the discovery that T-C-A(max) = T-A-C(min) = T-X(min) = T-K implies that disorder-driven crystalline-to-amorphous transformations result in the formation of the ideal glass, i.e., the glassy state that has the same entropy as that of the defect-free crystal. As the glassy state with the lowest free energy, its formation can be understood as the most energetically-favored, kinetically-constrained response of crystalline alloys driven far from equilibrium. (C) 1998 American Institute of Physics.