Do what gives you a buzz.

Visionaries and dreamers have always been dusted with a little oddity.

Invention isn't some impenetrable brand of magic; anyone can have a go.

That was the Alka-Seltzer moment, the moment when the tablet hits the water and begins to fizz.

The key to success is to risk thinking unconventional thoughts. Convention is the enemy of progress.

As long as you've got slightly more perception than the average wrapped loaf, you could invent something.

A good idea turns every cog in your mind, making you scared of bed in case the whole machine grinds to a halt.

I was on automatic pilot; ideas for gadgets kept coming, fed by a force of energy flowing through me and around me.

The notion that inventors are anorak-wearing crackpots with glasses held together with Sellotape is beguiling but wrong.

All inventors, they say, are a little mad. I reckon that only completely sane people are willing to admit they are slightly crazy.

But having had your bright, fresh, original idea, the really hard part is turning it into a successful product. That's what takes all the sweat.

I'd work eighteen-hour stretches and fall asleep in my clothes. Then I'd wake up in the middle of the night, brew a pot of tea, and start work again. I was tired, but work had become pure enjoyment.

But there is only one person I blame for getting shafted, and that's myself. I went into the deal which I thought would secure the future of Orange Aids with culpable impetuosity. I had been used to doing business on a handshake and my work of honour, and I made the error of actually believing what the men in the pin-striped suits told me.

Ideas for gadgets for the disabled were coming into my head so fast they seemed to be arriving from somewhere outside of me, beamed down by an unremitting force. I had little control over them, or their flow. I would wake up in the middle of the night. A blinding flash of an idea would rouse me from my bed and I'd rush down to my workshop to have a go at it before the inspiration dimmed.

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