BEIJING, June 27 (Xinhua) -- To some Chinese, Bill Gates, who retired on
Friday, is more than a billionaire and president of computer software giant
Microsoft. In a way, he has changed the perception of many people.
Chinese began getting familiar with his name about 15 years ago when
computers became a necessity at ordinary homes.
A NEW IDOL
According to an online survey at QQ.com, 48 percent of the 218,550 votes
listed Gates' most impressive title as "one of the world's richest" people.
In another by the Beijing Municipal Commission of Education last year, the
Seattle native ranked third among idols of students from 19 colleges in the
capital, following late Premier Zhou Enlaiand Chairman Mao Zedong.
In the past, young people's idols were Lei Feng, a soldier characterized as
a selfless and modest person who was indoctrinated to follow Mao in 1963, and
the adamant Paul Kocakin, hero of the Russian novel "How to Melt the Steel."
"College students nowadays tend to be more realistic," said Shen Jie, a
Chinese Academy of Social Sciences research fellow.
In fact, Gates did more than tell the conservative Chinese after the
country adopted its reform and opening-up policy that "greed is good."
"The billionaire who topped the Forbes fortune list for 13 years mapped out
another way to succeed," said Zhao Lulu, a 25-year-old pursuing a masters degree
in information and communication engineering at the Chinese Academy of Sciences.
Learning from Gates who dropped out of Harvard University to start his
career, Li Wancheng, a Chongqing Technology and Business University student,
quit to open a shop near his school in 2005. Later he worked as contractor of
Building Automation System.
"I want to become the Chinese Bill Gates," he said. "Each success now could
bring me a step nearer to my idol."