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The Pagani Utopia is a mid-engine sports car produced by the Italian sports car manufacturer Pagani. It was developed under the 'C10' codename and presented on 12 September 2022 at the Teatro Lirico in Milan. [5] It is Pagani's third car model, superseding the Pagani Huayra, with more power and a manual gearbox option. [6]
Pagani has also used a new material for the Roadster called carbon triax, which is a tri-axis fiberglass meshed with carbon-fibre power bands. Pagani states that the car produces 816 kg (1,800 lb) of downforce or 1.8 lateral G-force. This figure is unproven, but if true, Pagani will have set a new record. [19]
Pagani Automobili S.p.A. (commonly referred to as Pagani) is an Italian manufacturer of sports cars and carbon fiber components. The company was founded in 1992 by Argentine-Italian businessman and engineer Horacio Pagani and is based in San Cesario sul Panaro , near Modena, Italy .
Dahua Technology provided technical support and smart applications for Yellow Dragon Sports Center during the 2022 Asian Games. [26] In July 2023, Dahua Technology signed an agreement with the Semper Altius School Network and the Anáhuac High School Network in Mexico. [27] Dahua was a sponsor of the 2023 Tour de Langkawi. [28]
Horacio Pagani (born 10 November 1955) is an Argentine-Italian businessman and automobile engineer in the automotive industry. He is the founder of Pagani Automobili S.p.A., an Italian specialty automaker. Prior to founding his own company, Pagani worked for Renault and Lamborghini.
The Pagani Zonda R [1] is a track day car developed and manufactured by Italian sports car manufacturer Pagani. It debuted at the 2007 Geneva Motor Show , using the 6.0-litre GT 112 engine sourced from the racing version of the Mercedes-Benz CLK-GTR . [ 2 ]
Rational Synergy is a software tool that provides software configuration management (SCM) capabilities for all artifacts related to software development including source code, documents and images as well as the final built software executable and libraries.
The first CCC (acronym for 'Change and Configuration Control') product was released in the early 70s and was designed as a project for a Defense Department contractor in Santa Barbara CA. (The company at the time was Hughes Aircraft, now Santa Barbara Research Center for Raytheon.) It became the first commercially available CM tool.