Yesterday's guest blogger John Dobken is writing again today about an article in Communications Technology magazine.
Communications Technology magazine recognizes Insight Communications in its most recent issue for best practices in the area of technology. Take a look at what they had to say about Insight and our Chief Technology Officer Hamid Heidary.

Less well-known is the new Insight, the slimmed down MSO that emerged without its Illinois or much of its Indiana markets as a result of the dissolution of its partnership with Comcast; or the Insight where technical leadership now resides with Hamid Heidary, his predecessor, the popular Charlie Dietz, having retired.
Heidary added CTO to his title in April. For the previous two years, he held the title of executive vice president, central operations. His previous career included chief operating office at Iesy Hessen (a German MSO) and CTO of NTL:Europe.
What tripped the wire for us this year was not Heidary's promotion, but rather evidence that he leads a team that very much knows what it is doing.
A year ago, PC World readers ranked Insight Broadband 10.0 ahead of its competitors in terms of overall customer satisfaction and both downstream and upstream speeds. In addition to its 10.0 (10 Mbps) service, the MSO offers a 20 Mbps download service and up to 1.5 Mbps upload.
Insight's prowess in high-speed data is commonly known and attested by savvy users on at BroadbandForum.com, where Insight execs have been known to mix it up. As is clear by talking with Heidary, high-class performance is no accident.
"Two years ago, if you were to have asked what is the speed or experience of customers that get on the Internet to browse or do whatever they do, we hoped it was good, but had no way of knowing," Heidary said.
What it took to gain that kind of granular and widely accessible visibility was the combination of an off-the-shelf measurement tool and a homegrown database presentation interface. Add to that a tenfold expansion of its network operations center (NOC), the codification of hundreds of processes, and the use of PCs programmed to act like subscribers.
That's the kind of operational sophistication that lies behind end-of-year Q4 2007 results that included 26 percent growth in high-speed Internet, 60 percent growth in phone, 18 percent growth in digital and - stranger yet to say - 5 percent growth in basic customers. Results from Q1 2008 were consistent with those numbers. Consider that they were achieved amidst a distracting corporate split, and you have our third example, another top-tier performance in broadband cable engineering and technical operations.
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