I do not think they are throwing darts. My read is that they are making the following two points:
- the “Open Source Desktop” is pretty much a Linux monoculture and they are an alternative to that
- the Haiku philosophy is to offer a unified and consistent user experience vs a collection of a thousand independent projects approach ( the Linux experience )
- Haiku offers everything needed for a desktop experience under the banner of a single project ( another way of saying the previous point )
- the “Open Source Desktop” is pretty much a Linux monoculture and they are an alternative to that
- the Haiku philosophy is to offer a unified and consistent user experience vs a collection of a thousand independent projects approach ( the Linux experience )
- Haiku offers everything needed for a desktop experience under the banner of a single project ( another way of saying the previous point )