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I have a carbon fiber brush. Never seen a sticky roller like that before. I don't have a more elaborate system myself mostly due to lack of funds.
A couple of friends have a different roller with a sticky surface, sort of like "gummy" rubber. It is a slightly different type of rubber than that used for a lint roller, and it's washable. I can't say I'm a fan (I'm afraid of fumbling it and messing up the cartridge, which is way, way more than the roller!), but they seem to like the results.
I have done the glue trick to a record before--it doesn't hurt anything but it is not very convenient, and it didn't improve the record at all. (Whatever noise that was in the vinyl wasn't dirt.)
I do use ultrasonic cleaning plus a record vacuum, and that seems to work the best of anything I've tried.
It's a large ultrasonic bath, with the records suspended over them on a spindle of sorts (with the labels sealed off). The spindle rotates a few minutes per revolution, and I have it down to where I can do about 15 records per hour. I use a mixture of filtered water, Tergitol and a small amount of pure (laboratory grade) isopropyl alcohol. I use the record vacuum with filtered water as a rinse. I used to vacuum for years (I bought the machine back in the 90s) but the ultrasonic part was the only thing that would loosen the dirt that was packed down in the grooves. I've had a few records that no amount of the record vacuum could get clean, although I am considering upgrading to something far more powerful in the near future.
I can find the link when I get home later, but there is a thread by Harry Weisfeld (the owner of turntable/record vac manufacturer VPI) on their support forum and my setup is nearly the same, albeit with a lesser vacuum system.
There are actually ultrasonic systems out there that will clean a single LP, hands-off, but they are way too expensive. We're talking $3,000 and up. And, they don't even have a rinse/vacuum feature either. I figure I'm ahead of that game in more ways than one, even though my cleaning setup is rather simple in comparison.