I'm more of a bike guy, so I have experience with motorcycle carbs.
A flat slide (or even a cheaper round slide) will flow a lot more for a given throttle bore diameter than a SU. Carburetor circuits number about the same (certain ones are pumper types). The big difference is the needle is controlled by the gas pedal, not via vacuum (like a cv (SU) carb).
I'm not convinced they're better than a properly set-up DCOE Weber. The Webers have more circuits, and because of that, they're more tuneable. A very good tuner with a DCOE can get a flat fuel curve through most of the rpm range. Where a motorcycle carburetor will have the advantage to beat a Weber is to flow more air for a smaller diameter venturi... this increase velocity through the venturi which will improve the carburetor 'signal' and atomization.
That said, annular venturi DCOE Webers do exist, and would be the ultimate. Basically, this design removes the booster in the middle of the venturi, so you can use a smaller choke for a given cfm, which improves the carburetor signal and atomization - which keeps things flowing up high but provides better velocity and 'signal' at lesser engine speeds. It's a win-win.
Hope this helps.