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Aviation

How Trump let Boeing off the hook for the 737 MAX crashes

Can we trust Boeing to actually regulate itself?

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The brutal realities of ICE Air

How a shadowy network of charter airlines helps fuel Donald Trump’s mass deportations.

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Newark’s air traffic outages were just the tip of the iceberg

Top aviation officials descended on Newark’s airport earlier this month to declare the air traffic control crisis fixed. Within days they were proven wrong.

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The Newark airport crisis is about to become everyone’s problem

A shortage of air traffic controllers, bungled IT management, outdated technology, and a brewing disaster in our airspace.

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Andrew J. Hawkins
Archer is the ‘exclusive air taxi partner’ for the 2028 Olympics in LA.

Archer Aviation has said it plans on launching its first commercial air taxi service in 2026, but it doesn’t expect to be “at scale” until 2028, which lines up well with the next Summer Olympics.

In addition to serving as the exclusive partner for the Olympics and Team USA, Archer will set up “vertiports” at key venues, with its 12-propeller Midnight aircraft providing trips to “VIPs, fans, and athletes,” as well as support for emergency services. Pretty bold plan for a company that has yet to receive all the FAA certifications it will need to operate its eVTOL service!

Archer Midnight aircraft in front of the LA Coliseum
Image: Archer Aviation
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Dominic Preston
Google adds tracker sharing with airlines.

You’ll be able to share the location of trackers in its Find Hub network (formerly Find My Device) with airline staff when you need to find lost luggage, just like you already can with Apple’s AirTags. Support won’t arrive until “early next year” though, and only on five airlines — while Apple supports over 15.

United’s Starlink-powered Wi-Fi is the end of airplane mode

The new gate-to-gate experience offers blistering fast Wi-Fi speeds, slower upload speeds, and low enough latency to make video calls possible (but not encouraged).

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Dominic Preston
China says ‘no’ to Boeing.

Bloomberg reports that local airlines have been told to refuse further deliveries of Boeing jets, in another blow for a beleaguered aerospace company that’s suffered from quality crises and layoffs.

Any Boeing imports would be hit by China’s 125 percent retaliatory tariff on US goods anyway, including a number of finished planes already earmarked for Chinese airlines. Boeing lags behind Airbus in China, and this isn’t going to help.

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Richard Lawler
SpaceX Crew-9 and the Boeing Starliner astronauts have landed safely.

Right on schedule, the Dragon capsule deployed its parachutes and landed off the coast of Florida as recovery crews began the process of bringing the capsule onboard a recovery ship and extracting its crew.

Dragon spacecraft floating in the ocean with speedboats approaching.
Image: NASA (YouTube)
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Richard Lawler
The Crew-9 return mission has completed its deorbit burn.

The Dragon spacecraft is fewer than 20 minutes out from splashdown in Florida. As noted on NASA’s livestream, it has completed the deorbit burn that lasted about seven and a half minutes at 5:18PM ET, and is entering a period of communications blackout as they reenter Earth’s atmosphere.

Its drogue parachutes will deploy four minutes before splashdown, beginning the process of slowing it down from 350 miles per hour before its targeted landing at about 5:57PM ET.

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Richard Lawler
The Starliner astronauts are on their way back to Earth.

Last night, Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams, along with Crew-9 members Aleksandr Gorbunov and Nick Hague, left the ISS in a SpaceX Dragon spacecraft now that the Crew-10 mission has arrived to relieve them. NASA will resume coverage of their return mission this afternoon, as they are expected to splash down off the coast of Florida at about 5:57PM ET, ending a voyage that started last June.

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Richard Lawler
NASA’s SpaceX Crew-10 mission is scheduled for launch, again.

Now that SpaceX ground teams have “successfully flushed a suspected pocket of trapped air” in the ground support hydraulics system used for the clamp arm supporting the Falcon 9 rocket, there will be another attempt to launch the Crew-10 mission to the ISS tonight, after the first one on Wednesday was scrubbed.

It’s scheduled for 7:03PM ET on Friday, March 14th, and once it reaches the space station, that will mean it’s time for Crew-9 and the stranded Boeing Starliner astronauts to make their way back to Earth, which could happen as soon as March 19th.

A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket with the company’s Dragon spacecraft on top on the launch pad.
Image: NASA / SpaceX
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Andrew J. Hawkins
United Airlines kicks off its Starlink Wi-Fi sprint.

Last year, United announced its intention to upgrade its entire fleet with Wi-Fi powered by Elon Musk’s Starlink satellites. As of today, the first Starlink-equipped regional plane is ready to fly. United said it only took about 8 hours to install the equipment, which is about 10 times faster than installing non-Starlink WiFi tech. The carrier plans to upgrade approximately 40 planes each month starting in May, with the goal of equipping the entire fleet of two-cabin regional aircraft by the end of the year.

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Umar Shakir
Ryanair will end paper boarding passes and check-in fees.

The European economy airline had plans to go all digital with boarding passes by May, but now the change will happen starting November 3rd. Ryanair hasn’t said how passengers who can’t access the app will get their boarding passes, but it did share that 80 percent of its annual passengers use digital passes.

What’s the deal with all these airplane crashes?

Don’t worry about air travel — yet.

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Quentyn Kennemer
Delta flight crashes in Toronto, no fatalities reported.

Delta Airlines flight 4819 from Minneapolis, MN crashed at Toronto Pearson International Airport on Monday, USA Today reports. Images shared by Toronto Sun columnist Brian Lilley show the plane upside down on the tarmac.

A Delta spokesperson told USA Today that there were no fatalities. Airport officials originally reported on X that all passengers and crew members were “accounted for” as emergency teams continued managing the scene.

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Andrew J. Hawkins
Electric flight startup Archer snags $300 million.

The investment builds on last year’s $430 million equity deal and leaves the aviation company with approximately $1 billion in liquidity. Archer says the money will be put toward building out its manufacturing capability in anticipation of launching an air taxi network in Los Angeles in time for the 2026 Olympics. The company is also moving more into the defense space, with plans to next-gen military aircraft for Anduril Industries. This funding round included investments from Blackrock, Willington, and leading institutional developers, Archer says.

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Dominic Preston
Supersonic goes boomless.

Boom’s XB-1 test craft has flown at supersonic speeds for a second time following its first flight last month, and this time nobody heard a thing. Microphones below the flight path confirmed no sonic boom was audible at the ground.

That matters because FAA regulations ban supersonic flight over land due to the risk of sonic boom damage. Boom hopes boomless flight could change that, and already has Elon Musk’s ear.

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Andrew J. Hawkins
Air New Zealand leases electric aircraft from Beta Technologies.

The Vermont-based startup provided a tech demonstrator aircraft to use for mail delivery across the island in 2025. The air carrier also purchased several charging solutions to keep the battery-powered aircraft in flight. Air New Zealand will use the aircraft to familiarize itself with Beta’s technology, including pilot and maintenance teams and route-planning.

Beta recently conducted the first flight of its production Alia aircraft.
Beta recently conducted the first flight of its production Alia aircraft.
Image: BETA Technologies/Brian Jenkins
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Andrew J. Hawkins
Beta takes flight.

Vermont-based electric aviation company Beta Technologies announced the inaugural flight of the production version of its ALIA aircraft. The ALIA is a conventional takeoff and landing aircraft (CTOL), as opposed to a vertical takeoff and landing one (VTOL), meaning it lacks the tilt rotors that you see on other prototype aircraft. But the propulsion is still battery powered, putting Beta in the same category of many air taxi startups. The FAA signed off on the first flight, and now Beta is seeking certification for commercial operation.

Beta’s ALIA aircraft in flight.
Beta’s ALIA aircraft in flight.
Brian Jenkins/Beta Technologies
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Richard Lawler
Delta is suing CrowdStrike over July’s global IT outage.

Reuters reports Delta filed a lawsuit Friday over the July 19th crash, blaming CrowdStrike for having “forced untested and faulty updates to its customers, causing more than 8.5 million Microsoft Windows-based computers around the world to crash.”

Delta’s CEO already called out Microsoft and CrowdStrike during a CNBC interview (included below), saying, “When was the last time you heard of a big outage at Apple?,” while Microsoft said Delta ignored offers to help recover faster.