yeah, but most materials become conductors at some degree.... rubber becomes a good conductor at, I believe, -230F (someone check me up on this)
remember, we cannot get anything to absolute zero. we've been able to get close, but thats the progress made by large labs with multimillion dollar budgets. the average end user will be saving up his entire life to pay for the bathrooms in that kind of facility. and it would be the mens' bathroom, too. after it had been used for a few years (you know what those are like... *shiver*)
also, remember that there is an innate speed at which processors run (which is why your overclocks sometimes are restricted by your processor, as opposed to the usual : RAM, northbridge, etc). why? because they simply cannot conduct the electricity rapidly enough to ensure stable operation - the peaks and the troughs of the electic signal are in the wrong range to properly function - some peaks don't quite reach the point at which the processor says "alright, theres a 1", and some troughs may slip above that point, causing the 0 to be identified as a 1.
what does that mean? that means that there is a definite point at which your processor will NOT go any further, and, on top of that, I would think that no matter how you do it, with current technology, you wouldn't be able to run a processor at any speed.
tough, eh?