The Boeing 747, known as the "Queen of the Skies," is one of the most iconic and beloved planes ever made. But it's slowly ...
The aviation company started 2024 still recovering from two crashes. Days into the year, a door panel broke off mid-flight ...
While privately funded programs to develop space vehicles and execute extraterrestrial missions have been in play for years, ...
The King of Saudi Arabia boards his Boeing 747 on a golden escalator, while Turkey's jet was gifted by Qatar following ...
Join me on a “once-a-lifetime” experience to fly with Hajj pilgrims back home on Stage 2 of Hajj Flight. I started my journey flying on an “empty” Boeing 747-400 from Fujairah, UAE to Madinah, Saudi ...
NASA astronauts Butch Wilmore and Sunita Williams will spend at least nine consecutive months aboard the International Space Station after their Boeing Starliner spacecraft returned to Earth empty.
Wilmore and Williams initially were supposed to spend several days aboard the station in June, as part of a test flight for Boeing’s capsule, but NASA opted to return Starliner to Earth without ...
The two NASA astronauts stuck in space after Boeing’s Starliner experienced issues earlier this year have been hit with a new delay. Astronauts Suni Williams and Butch Wilmore were part of Boeing’s ...
The astronaut duo who flew the first-ever crewed mission of Boeing's Starliner capsule will have to wait ... has been delayed to no earlier than late March 2025, NASA announced on Tuesday (Dec. 17).
What that means is an even longer stay for the two NASA astronauts who flew up in June to the ISS aboard Boeing’s beleaguered Starliner spacecraft. They launched on the first crewed mission of ...
It flew 46 of the 54 post-mission ferry flights from Dryden to the Kennedy Space Center. "NASA 905, a Boeing 747-123 model built in 1970, was the first and only SCA used by the space shuttle program ...
In 2022, if you recall, NASA successfully launched its Artemis ... makes Project Artemis an $82 billion cash cow for Boeing). However, consider one thing at a time. Before Boeing can get anywhere ...