The problem is motherboards typically only have 1 or 2 NVMe ports, but 4+ SATA ports. So consumers will be losing a lot of potential storage expandability when SATA SSDs are gone, especially in small form factor cases that don't have room for 3.5" spinning disks.
I think I figured out the problem... It has onboard memory for one profile, whichever is selected in the UI. My default profile has a bunch of buttons mapped that do not register as key presses when booted into Linux, so input remapper doesn't pick those up when the mouse button is pressed.
My solution was to create a profile that had all of the side buttons mapped as regular keyboard keys, and activate that profile before booting into Linux.
libratbag and Piper don't support my mouse (or any razer mice), unfortunately. I've also tried input remapper... couldn't get it working right on Bazzite, but maybe I was just doing something very wrong. Will give it another try!
There was a similar product someone got me as a gift a couple years ago. A subscription to vinyl postcards. I couldnt play them.
The problem wasn't that they were low quality. It was that they were too small. My turntable has automatic shutoff, where it lifts the tone arm off the record and swings it back out when the tone arm gets too close to the center. Considering how small these mini vinyls are, I suspect they will have the same problem and be unplayable on my turntable.
Lucca is great, too! Really can't go wrong with either, but I give Ayla the edge for being such a powerful badass who knows what she wants and goes out to get it.
They do exist. They're called boutique hotels now. There aren't a lot, and some of them tend to be pretty expensive. But they're out there.