Written by Dora Grabar
“Take a different route,” says Nika Peršić, a 17 year-old student and the visionary behind the film. “It’s always better to take a different route.”
Chips of the Future is a short film created for a filmmaking competition where the prompt was to make a video based on the predictions for the digital and technological world in 2025, hosted by Digital Tomorrow. Its premise is that in the future, people will be granted their intimacy and privacy in the form of a tortilla-like chip working on the principle of walkie-talkies.
“People could stand right next to you and not hear a single word you say, unless they have connected to your chip,” explains Nika. “If you’re in a café, you don’t need to hear other people’s noise. Take the chip and it’s just silence.”
Why did you choose communication as what you want to show in 2025?
“Privacy is important to people. It’s group calls brought to a new level – you have people, hanging out, and they only hear each other. Being able to choose exactly which people you hear and which you don’t is the direction in which technology is headed nowadays, I think. It’s all about privacy.
Communication is simple and not very often explored through the basics – smart watches and all that, but we have that already. We wanted to show something beyond that and not just robots and stuff like that.”
How did you choose the chips as the mean of communication?
“Chips are already becoming a thing. It sounds the same as chips that people eat, so we thought we’d make a joke out of it and choose tortilla chips as our vision of a chip. The entire film is kind of satirical, really.”
The film is very minimalistic. Is there any particular reason for that?
“Yes, actually – minimalism, in general, is very on point. There’s no unnecessary details, there’s no anything that really doesn’t need to be there. Our focus is on communication and if we show that people are either talking and you can hear them, or talking and you can’t hear them until you get the chip, then we did what we had to. There’s no point in making it fancy or over the top if you can do it simply.”
You said the film is satirical. How so?
“The satire lies in the whole concept that a tortilla chip, something we eat, could be integrated into technology and a means of communicating. The referencing to micro-chips is supposed to also reflect the idea, as it is, being something thought-provoking or food for thought, maybe hard to achieve and outside of the realms of reality we live in today, but a creative concept worth striving to.”
You can watch the film below.

I liked their vision of future communication becoming more private and controlled. The tortilla‑chip idea is simple, funny, and still feels surprisingly believable. It shows how technology might let us choose exactly who we listen to in a really creative way.
Jan Vašak
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The article as well as the short film is great. The article is very well put together and it is very informative about the short film. It gives you enough information to make you interested in the movie but not too much so you have to watch the movie to discover what happens in it. Overall I really like this article
Jakov Levatić
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I really enjoyed reading this article and watching the short film. The article is compact and very well written, and the film is nice.
Hugo Darabuš
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I really like the idea of this short film. The world changes so fast that in reality, this vision of the future could be just as likely as any other, even if it was made as satire.
Vilim Ljubić
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I do not like their version of the future and I think that, that version of the future is completely unrealistic. Now when we are in the 2025 we can see how they have missed absolute everything down to the fact that technology is moving towards privacy because now we have things such as EU’s proposed chat control law which is one of the biggest invasions of privacy in the information age. They also failed to mention technologies such as AI which has been the centre of attention in the tech world for the past few years.
Nikola Slunjski
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It is funny reading this and watching it in “the big 2025”. I their chip concept is very interasting and we would have more privacy. But I also see some problems with it. If we were in public and some trouble started happening we would not hear people screaming or somebody yelling from the other side of our house that they need help. So the chips would need some alternations. But on the other side, I loved the shots in the film, it was very creative and very straight-forward.
Karla Barbir
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I like the idea of a tortilla chip and think it’s funny how the filmmaker took a satirical turn with their film. Although, I don’t think that it would ever become a real device and I can confirm that it wasn’t invented yet as of 2025.
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The article is interesting and informative. I believe this idea is good in theory, but leaves a lot of questions. The idea of only hearing someone you want is good, but how is this protected from others hearing you. Privacy is scarce in the modern world with the invention of cameras and the rise of hacking. If this idea is created idealy, it would reshape the world as we know it.
Nikola Sajko
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