1) Do you feel that Formula one has developed & how?
Yes, in all sorts of ways. One just has to take a look at what an F1 looked like in each of the decades from the 1950s to nowadays. From being hunking tubs of metal all the way to sleek carbon-fibre 200mph+ bolts of lightening is an extraordinary development. The circuit have also changed beyond recognition, mainly on the grounds of safety. From once being fiercely dangerous blasts through open forest with trees for crash barriers, we now have gravel traps and run-off areas and crash barriers to stop errant cars from doing tree-felling and killing driver and spectators. There have been all sorts of methods in the past to help save a driver's life in the event of a crash. In the 70s, chicken-wire fencing was put in gravel traps to catch cars that had left the track. It looks awful now, but back then, it was a major advancement in safety technique.
Safety has also prompted a huge change from what drivers wore in the 50s, which was basically normal clothing material and a little leather hat with goggles. Now they have a full-on fireproof race-suit and a helmet that is tested vigorously for the protection of the drivers.
2) Why do you think the sport has developed?
Safety, spectacle, money, sponsorship, new technological ideas...
3) Do you feel that the development has been beneficial for the sport?
Yes, largely. The sport is now much safer. Drivers can now have a crash that would've been fatal 2 decades ago, and simply hop out fine. I'm a bit of a traditionalist when it comes to the circuits though, and many long standing events are facing the chop to make way for newer venues, especially in Asia. This is one change that I don't want to go too far. We need to retain the spirit and passion and history of venues of yesteryear, balanced with a mix of some new venues in different countries. But there's a danger of this balance getting tipped in favour of the latter.
4) If yes, why do you think this?
I've largely explained that already. Safety for drivers and fans is only a good thing.
5) Do you feel that success in formula one is down to the driver or the technology?
Both. A driver trains like an athlete to drive an F1 car, and even then, a lack of talent can be spotted a mile off. Technology does play a major role though, and the richer teams are beneficial in this respect.
6) Would you prefer to see each team have the equal amounts of money in order to put all teams on equal grounds?
It doesn't need to be EQUAL, but I don't like to see certain F1 teams struggling on a shoe-string budget. That's not good. The gap between the big teams and the less well-off teams is as immense as ever, and I would like to see that gap reduced. There are many teams run purely on passion (rather than the manufacturers, or brands, etc) and they deserve a chance to fight for results rather than merely survival.