Has he had a chance to use the newly adopted technologies in a ground-up, fresh-start situation, or has he been maintaining existing systems while someone else (who you'd call "smart") has adopted the new technology and built something non-trivial?
If he has had to try and comprehend the new stuff when a substantial bit has already been written, and hasn't seen it grow from the ground-up, you've put him at a disadvantage. Oftentimes the only way to "get it" with a new technology is to start with a blank page. This happens a lot--some whiz engineer generates a new codebase/framework/whatever, and only he the original author gets the benefit of doing it from scratch, and understanding it inside out. In that case, give him the guy new to the technology a chance to do a small project with the in said technology from scratch, and see if it improves the comprehension.
