Both Simon Peyton-Jones and Don Syme work at Micosoft Research in
Cambridge England. MS has also had several open positions posted in
the language/tool group in that location.

My first reaction was he must be working on F#, not C#.

On Sep 27, 6:48 am, Casper Bang <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Well it makes perfect sense though. If you care about technologies and
> engineering more than politics and religion, Microsoft is not a bad
> place to be. Though I'm sure some would try to spin this another way,
> probably the classic but lame "just use Scala" remark. It's sad that
> the Java world lost one of the few running engines, but on the other
> hand it's perfectly understandable on his part. Hejlsberg, Meier and
> Gafter. now that's one scary team I wouldn't want to play!
>
> /Casper
>
> On Sep 27, 10:35 am, "Mark Derricutt" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > Sounds about time for that cross-over-podcast with the dotnet rocks guys...
>
> > On Sat, Sep 27, 2008 at 8:10 PM, Amarjeet Singh
> > <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>wrote:
>
> > > Microsoft hired sometime back, Simon Peyton Jones, a Haskell pioneer, who
> > > supposedly is also behind F# [though, I am not sure 100% about this 
> > > piece].
> > > Another legend with them is Anders Hejlsberg, who is behind the C# 
> > > language.
> > > He was the one who got Delphi to be a successor to Turbo Pascal at 
> > > Borland.
>
> > > Now, Neil Gafter is with them.
>
> > --
> > "It is easier to optimize correct code than to correct optimized code." --
> > Bill Harlan
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