IronPython was quite young at the time (1.0 only made it out in November of that year). As far as I can remember, IronRuby didn't even exist at the time, and the CLR had no dynamic language support.
So he's probably correct in that the .NET developer community hadn't yet significantly embraced dynamic languages on the platform.
IronPython was quite young at the time (1.0 only made it out in November of that year). As far as I can remember, IronRuby didn't even exist at the time, and the CLR had no dynamic language support.
So he's probably correct in that the .NET developer community hadn't yet significantly embraced dynamic languages on the platform.