The .NET community is extremely large, perhaps you run in a small circle.
A job search on indeed.com (a job listing consolidator) within 25 miles of my area, Santa Monica, CA reveals
2,477 jobs for .NET
2,083 jobs for Java
1,284 jobs for python
685 jobs for Ruby
Here are # of questions with following tags on StackOverflow:
Java: 845,330
C#: 786,850
Python: 417,737
Ruby: 132,074
I can't speak for the rest of the world, but I would guess if you looked at 200 of the largest companies in Los Angeles, 90% of them have at least some .NET code running for something. It's pretty ubiquitous.
Damn would I like to live somewhere that has 1284 Python jobs listed, over here in the UK .Net (outside the web) dominates, love me some C# but Python just isn't on the radar at all (yet it's widely used internally).
A job search on indeed.com (a job listing consolidator) within 25 miles of my area, Santa Monica, CA reveals
2,477 jobs for .NET
2,083 jobs for Java
1,284 jobs for python
685 jobs for Ruby
Here are # of questions with following tags on StackOverflow:
Java: 845,330
C#: 786,850
Python: 417,737
Ruby: 132,074
I can't speak for the rest of the world, but I would guess if you looked at 200 of the largest companies in Los Angeles, 90% of them have at least some .NET code running for something. It's pretty ubiquitous.