This is part 2 of an exclusive How To Academy event. To see part 3, click here: • James Dyson: I don’t care about the Space ...
In conversation with Times columnist Matthew Syed, Sir James Dyson shares the story of his life as an inventor and entrepreneur and explains why he is convinced that the solution to the world’s problems will be met by young engineering minds. Dyson has always looked to the future, even setting up his own university to help provide the next generation of engineers and designers. For, as he says, ‘everything changes all the time, so experience is of little use’.
James Dyson was born in Norfolk in 1947 and studied at the Royal College of Art in London, before joining Rotork to engineer and make the Sea Truck, a high-speed flat-bottomed boat, with Jeremy Fry. Best known for his revolutionary cyclonic vacuum cleaner, his products have been sold around the world, renowned for their innovative technology, design and efficiency. James believes that engineers can improve the world and he helps them to do so through the Dyson Institute of Engineering and Technology, The James Dyson Foundation, and the annual James Dyson Award. On YouTube, James has been featured on WIRED, Hook, UPROXX Studio, Dyson, James Dyson Foundation, GQ Taiwan, CNA, and The Secret Sauce.
Matthew Syed is a leading columnist and feature writer for The Times and the host of the UK’s biggest podcast: Flintoff, Savage and the Ping Pong Guy on BBC Radio 5. Before becoming a writer Matthew was the England table tennis number one for almost a decade, three times Commonwealth Champion, and he twice represented Great Britain in the Olympic Games. Matthew is the writer of two books Bounce: The Myth of Talent and the Power of Practice, and Black Box Thinking, which was a Sunday Times No.1 bestseller. On YouTube, Matthew has been featured on TEDx Talks, bookarmy, Nico Rosberg, Super Charged, RSA and The Diary of a CEO.
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