Suzuki Baleno

The Suzuki Baleno nameplate has been used by the Japanese manufacturer Suzuki to denote several different compact cars since 1995.

  • From 1995 to 2002, the Suzuki Baleno that was sold in Europe and Asia-Pacific was a rebadged Suzuki Cultus Crescent. It was also produced and sold in India as the Maruti Suzuki Baleno until 2007.
  • After the introduction of the Suzuki Aerio in 2001, the Baleno nameplate was discontinued in Europe and Asia Pacific, and remained in use only in Indonesia. This Baleno was a rebadged Suzuki Aerio sedan, marketed as the Suzuki Baleno Next-G, sold from 2003 to 2007.
  • From 2008 to 2010 Indonesia received a rebadged Suzuki SX4 sedan, marketed as the Suzuki Neo Baleno and then Suzuki Baleno SX4.
  • Suzuki Baleno – A five-door hatchback automobile introduced in 2015.[1]
gollark: That could be stored on a simple card or just done in software.
gollark: In a modern and sanely designed network, you would probably just need... a private asymmetric crypto key to verify the device/your identity, network ID, and probably a few other bits of data but I can't think of any right now.
gollark: Oh look, styro just entered the diode cult.
gollark: I could understand "hardware card thing with a bit of data on it", but SIMs actually run quite complex and often exploitable software.
gollark: eSIMs are *still hardware devices*. Just programmable ones. Which is... why.

References

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