US has produce several tech billioniares and millionaires like Gates. Having even a single Bill Gates bringing in say 10B USD is big deal for a country like kenya.
As usual, you have failed to understand the issue that is actually being discussed. We all know that the USA has produced many tech *illionaires. Nobody disputes that. Nor would anybody dispute that "Having even a single Bill Gates bringing in say 10B USD is big deal for a country like kenya."
What is being disputed is your claim that giving computers to kids will lead to people like Gates and Zuckerberg.For amusement: Did you that Ma Yun (aka Jack Ma) did not even hear about the internet until 1994 (when he was about 30), didn't own a computer until he was about 34, can't write a "hallo world" program, ...?
You seem to have a very short memory. Remember that exchange in which you started by claiming that Kenya would follow the "many countries that have moved to developed world through focusing solely on services"; we chased you around as you jumped from one bad "proof" to another; and you ended up in the total reversal of claiming that Kenya would be a "rare exception"? Estonia was one of your "proofs" there. You did not do well with it then, and it is no better here.
In 2015, the largest contributor to Estonia's GDP is
manufacturing, at 15.1%---higher than Kenya's, yet Estonia is your example of the high-tech path to follow. Next is wholesale/retail trade etc., at 12.3%; next is real estate, at 10.4%; ....;ICT is farther down, at 5.5%.
In 2015, machinery and appliances make up almost one-third of Estonia's exports; next is wood and wood products; next is agricultural and food products; next is mineral products; next is other manufactured products; .... ICT exports are apparently so small that they are not considered among "main exports"