Danh ngôn của James Dyson (Sứ mệnh: 8)

Enjoy failure and learn from it. You can never learn from success.
If you didn't have patents, no one would bother to spend money on research and development. But with patents, if someone has a good idea and a competitor can't copy it, then that competitor will have to think of their own way of doing it. So then, instead of just one innovator, you have two or three people trying to do something in a new way.
I'm not into politics but I am committed to a cause: ensuring design technology and engineering stays on the U.K. curriculum, alongside science and maths - grounding abstract theory, merging the practical with the academic.
When you say 'design,' everybody thinks of magazine pages. So it's an emotive word. Everybody thinks it's how something looks, whereas for me, design is pretty much everything.
I don't particularly follow the Bauhaus school of design, where you make everything into a black box - simplify it.
Today, computers are almost second nature to most of us.
Anger is a good motivator.
Design and technology should be the subject where mathematical brainboxes and science whizzkids turn their bright ideas into useful products.
Britain's great strength is its innovative, design and engineering natural ability and we're not using it.
Failure is an enigma. You worry about it, and it teaches you something.
I don't design down to a price.