Oddly Influenced

Oddly Influenced

Author: Brian Marick Language: English Episodes: 55
Brian Marick hosts Oddly Influenced, a podcast that digs into the unusual and often overlooked connections between software development and the wider world. Each episode starts with a concept, theory, or practice that originated far from the realm of code-perhaps in sociology, theater, history, or urban planning-and traces its journey into the hands of software practitioners. The focus is on the concrete application: how these borrowed ideas were adapted, what problems they aimed to solve, and what actually happened when people tried them. You’ll hear about the successes, the surprising failures, and the messy, fascinating reality of translating an abstract principle into working practice. This isn’t about generic inspiration or vague parallels; it’s a detailed look at cross-disciplinary pollination, examining the mechanics of how influence actually works. The conversations are grounded and specific, avoiding hype to explore what we can genuinely learn from fields that don’t think in loops and logic. For anyone in technology or education curious about how innovation often comes from the edges, this podcast provides a unique and thoughtful perspective. It’s for listeners who enjoy deep dives into the history and sociology of their craft, who appreciate hearing stories that aren’t the usual case studies, and who are open to having their own thinking oddly influenced by the end of an episode.
Episodes
BONUS: Seeing like a personality survey [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 13:12
My goal is to help you understand what it means when you see a headline like “Scientists find that people on the political right are less open to experience than people on the left.”TL;DR: For practical purposes, it does…
Personality and destiny [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 28:09
A summary of the "situationist" faction of personality psychology, which holds that behavior is strongly influenced by the situation. Knowing someone's personality type adds little value when predicting how they'll behav…
This is not an episode (a diversion into what makes explanations good) [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 32:17
Not an episode that suggests ideas for people to try in software projects. Instead, I am reacting to the book /Communities of Practice/, whose ideas are not explained well enough that I can use them confidently in an epi…
Legitimate peripheral participation: the book and the idea [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 22:58
"Legitimate peripheral participation" is based on observations about how novices learn in the presence of experts. The novel bits are that novices learn better from fellow novices than from experts, that we need to pay a…
/Seeing Like a State/, part 3: the users, the clients [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 33:03
In this episode, I hope to give you some helpful hints about *actually* improving the lives of the users of the software you create. Or, if you’re the kind of “change agent” or “coach” I used to be, the lives of the, uh,…
Interview: Glenn Vanderburg on engineering [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 29:36
In episode 12, I used the chapter in /Image and Logic/ about Monte Carlo methods to argue that analogies of software development to engineering are not helpful. Glenn Vanderburg pushed back: it's not *engineering* that's…