Washington,
Dec 21 (IANS) Nearly two-thirds of Americans believe
that the "next Bill Gates" will come from
China, Japan or India, while only one in five believe
that he could be a compatriot, says a new poll.
Practically
half of all Americans (49 percent) believe that the
next great technology leader will come from either China
or Japan, a poll by Zogby International and 463 Communications
found.
Twenty-one
percent believe that he will come from the United States
while 13 percent believe he or she will come from India,
according to the Zogby/463 Internet Attitudes poll released
Wednesday. It is based on a nationwide telephone survey
of 1,203 adults conducted Dec 5 to 8.
"The
next Bill Gates has already been born, and time will
tell what country is providing the environment of innovation,
entrepreneurism and opportunity to enable him or her
to flourish with the next great idea," said 463
partner Tom Galvin.
The
Internet Attitudes poll tested Americans views on their
perceptions of Internet. Among the findings:
*
Kids are more Internet-savvy than Congressmen. An overwhelming
majority -
83 percent - believes that a typical 12-year-old knows
more about the Internet than their member of Congress.
Republicans (85 percent) and Democrats (86 percent)
agreed with each other.
*
Internet vs. the printing press. While the Web is roughly
550 years younger than the printing press, one-third
(32 percent) of all Americans believe that the Internet
is a greater invention.
*
Sixty-five percent said Johannes Gutenberg's printing
press that merely nabbed him the title "Man of
the Millennium" by Time Magazine is a greater invention.
*
Interestingly, while whites favoured the printing press
over the Internet by 69 to 27 percent, only 57 percent
of African Americans favoured the printing press and
41 percent chose the Internet.
*
Moreover, Hispanic Americans actually favoured the Internet
51 to 47 percent and Asian Americans surveyed also chose
the Internet by 85 to 12 percent.
*
Car more important than email. While many may think
the Internet is a historic invention, it still trails
badly behind in what they depend upon for their work.
When
asked "What would make it harder for you to work
- your car not starting, or losing Internet and email
access?", 78 percent gave the nod to the car while
only 10 percent said the Internet.
Of
those surveyed making more than $100,00 a year, 31 percent
chose the loss of Internet access, while only 6 percent
of those making less than $35,000 did.
Other
findings of the survey:
*Two-thirds
of Americans believe that soon there will be no place
in the world where one would not be able to access the
Internet. Sixty-six percent said that in 10 years they
would be able to access the Internet anywhere they are
in the world.
*
Two in three Americans believe that new camera and Internet
technologies are turning US into a nation of voyeurs
and paparazzi.
*
While "You" is this year's Time Magazine "Man
of the Year", most Americans aren't quite ready
to rely on "citizen videos" for their news
just yet.
*
Seventy percent said they would rather watch the evening
news coverage instead of a citizen video report on an
event. Though, only one year after YouTube burst onto
the scene, 25 percent of those 18-49 years old would
chose citizen video.
*
Self-described progressives picked citizen video 30
percent of the time, while only 19 percent of those
calling themselves conservatives did.
Zogby
International has been tracking public opinion since
1984 in North America, Latin America, the Middle East,
Asia and Europe. 63 Communications is a strategic communications
consultancy.