TrueByte builds tools that bring order to the work that teams keep deferring, without adding to the load.
TrueByte is a solo-founder software studio. It builds serious B2B tools for the operational work that breaks under pressure: testing, releases, delivery. Every tool is built to run in your environment and be owned by your team.
WAVE is live in alpha today. Chronix is in build. Both are below.
You may be here to check the vendor behind a tool you are considering. That is the right move.
I would do the same. So here is how I work, plainly.
Every TrueByte tool starts as a real problem I carried on real teams, not a feature list.
TrueByte tools are built to run in your environment, on your machines. Nothing phones home.
A tool should be plain enough for your team to read, run, and keep. Not a black box only the vendor understands.
I say only what is true.
No logos I have not earned.
No customer quotes I do not have yet.
No claims ahead of the working code.
When something is in build, I say in build. And when a TrueByte tool is not a fit for you, I say that too.
Two products. Here is exactly where each one stands.
WAVE is visual test automation for regulated and air-gapped environments. It is live in alpha.
Working today:
- build tests on a visual canvas
- watch a run live with the step debugger
- use variables and connection profiles
- group tests into suites and regression runs
- get HTML and JSON reports
- and open every run's saved evidence in the artifact browser.
Today's nodes call HTTP endpoints, parse data (JSON, XML), and write log messages.
More node types are in build, and the WAVE page keeps the full list, what works now and what is coming.
Read the full WAVE page at wave.truebyte.io.
Chronixin buildChronix is a Release Governance Platform. It is in build.
It is not live yet, so I will not describe it here as if it were. If that name speaks to a problem your team has, the waitlist is open.
Join the waitlist at chronix.truebyte.io.
TrueByte is one engineer.
That is a fact worth weighing when you pick a vendor. Weigh it next to this one: every tool is built to run in your environment and be plain enough for your team to read, run, and keep, so your project keeps working even if TrueByte someday does not.
Here he is, in his own words.

I am Alex. I have worked in IT since I was 16, more than twenty years now. I have been a software architect since 2021. I built and tested distributed systems for satellite networks and large telecom platforms, software that ships into regulated, high-security environments. I built the test automation, the simulators, and the CI/CD pipelines myself.
TrueByte is where I build fixes for problems I lived myself. The full story behind WAVE, with the real numbers from that work, is on the WAVE page.
Contact
Write to me at
I am the engineer who builds these tools, and the reply comes from me too.
Ask me anything, including whether a TrueByte tool is a fit for you. If it is not, I will say so and point you to something better.