Codezero Technologies
Alex Langley is a seasoned professional with extensive experience in sales and strategic alliances across various technology sectors. Currently serving as the Director of Sales and Strategic Alliances at OneLayer since February 2025, Langley focuses on enhancing visibility and threat prevention for private LTE and 5G networks. In addition, Langley is an advisor for the Caller Verify SaaS product at TechJutsu and an investor in CodeZero Technologies Inc., which facilitates secure cloud development. Previous roles include Regional Sales Manager positions at Grip Security, Lacework, and Okta, achieving recognition such as the Lacework President's Club. Langley started a career in sales at Oracle and TeraGo Networks and held a managerial role at Pitney Bowes. Academic credentials include an MBA in Strategy from Queen's University and a degree in Management and Operational Studies from Western University.
This person is not in any teams
This person is not in any offices
Codezero Technologies
1 followers
While Kubernetes is largely recognized as the de facto standard for cloud orchestration, most developers would rather not use it because of its current complexity. Tens of millions of developers rely on tens of thousands of DevOps engineers to run Kubernetes, which creates huge bottlenecks that affect all technologies using cloud tools, like AI,ML, IoT and so on. CodeZero has created a new approach to Kubernetes development that helps companies quickly establish modern development techniques. 75% of a developer’s time is spent on debugging, or 1,500 hours a year. In the US alone, $113B is spent annually on identifying and fixing product defects. CodeZero is the modern Kubernetes platform that allows teams to collaboratively develop and debug microservices locally and in-cluster. CodeZero compresses the developer feedback loop so new features are implemented, tested and released 10x faster than traditional development methods by allowing developers to debug their code without having to spend time deploying software to the cluster each time they want to test a change.