Young keep it simple in High-tech World: Survey
Posted on Tue, 24 Jul 2007 07:00:00 CDT | by Luigi Lugmayr
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LONDON (Reuters) - While young people embrace the Web with real or virtual
friends and their mobile phone is never far away, relatively few like technology
and those that do tend to be in Brazil, India and China, according to a survey.
Only a handful think of technology as a concept, and just 16 percent use terms
like "social networking," said two combined surveys covering 8- to 24-year-olds
published on Tuesday by Microsoft and Viacom units MTV Networks and Nickelodeon.
"Young people don't see "tech" as a separate entity - it's an organic part of
their lives," said Andrew Davidson, vice president of MTV's VBS International
Insight unit.
"Talking to them about the role of technology in their lifestyle would be like
talking to kids in the 1980s about the role the park swing or the telephone
played in their social lives -- it's invisible."
The surveys involved 18,000 young people in 16 countries including the UK, U.S.,
China, Japan, Canada and Mexico.
Terms most frequently used by the young when talking about technology related to
accessing content for free, notably "download and "burn."
The surveyors found the average Chinese computer user has 37 online friends they
have never met, Indian youth are most likely to see mobile phones as a status
symbol, while one-in-three UK and U.S. teenagers say they cannot live without
games consoles.
"The way each technology is adopted and adapted throughout the world depends as
much on local cultural and social factors as on the technology itself," said
Davidson.
For example, the key digital device for Japan's young is the mobile phone
because of the privacy and portability it offers those who live in small homes
with limited privacy.
They found Japanese children aged eight to 14 have only one online friend they
have not met, compared to a global average of five. Some 93 percent of Chinese
computer users aged 8-14 have more than one friend online they have never met.
Davidson said this was encouraging those aged 8-14 in China to select online
over television -- a trend not seen in any other market in that age group.
The changes in how the youth market engages with technology is keenly followed
by advertisers and content firms.
"Traditional youth marketing considered opinion formers and influencers to be a
small elite, but these days the elite has become much larger," said Davidson.
For parents worried about what their children are getting up to amid the wave of
gadgets, little has changed in a generation.
The surveyors found the most popular activities the under-14s enjoy were
watching TV, listening to music and being with friends. The rankings for those
older was similar although listening to music was top.
© Copyright 2007 Reuters.
Posted on Tue, 24 Jul 2007 07:00:00 CDT | by Luigi Lugmayr
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