Geneva Researchers built a brain-inspired chip that operates just fractions of a degree above absolute zero, among the coldest conditions ever engineered and, observers added, slightly above the tone of a corporate apology email.
At such temperatures electrical resistance all but vanishes, achieving a level of frictionless cooperation the human resources department has spent decades describing in mission statements but never once observing.
Asked what the chip is for, researchers offered the usual horizon: modeling proteins, breaking codes, and eventually powering the automated phone tree that already cannot understand the word 'representative.' Observers were most excited by the last, noting that a system this cold had finally been built to spec.
Skeptics cautioned that a machine which only functions when absolutely everything around it has gone cold may struggle to find applications outside the modern dating scene, where it should feel right at home.
Keeping it at temperature requires a refrigeration rig the size of a small chapel and a budget the lab would characterize only as 'devotional.' A senior researcher said the warmth of the room, the breath of the technicians, any trace of human presence, all register to the machine as noise. "It performs best when no one is there and nothing is felt," she said, a specification it shares with the firm's own help line.
Pressed on whether the chip could ever run at room temperature, the team was candid: warming it up causes the entire system to lose coherence and stop working, a failure mode the rest of us simply call Monday.
Satyr Satire reached the chip for comment and was placed in a queue. It estimated our wait at the heat death of the universe.