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Delta's CrowdStrike tiff, a Boeing mystery persists, and investor updates from Frontier and Ryanair: airlines news roundup

Delta's CrowdStrike tiff, a Boeing mystery persists, and investor updates from Frontier and Ryanair: airlines news roundup

Plus: American Airlines says that summer is already over

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Image for article titled Delta's CrowdStrike tiff, a Boeing mystery persists, and investor updates from Frontier and Ryanair: airlines news roundup
Graphic: Images: Patrick T. Fallon/AFP, Justin Sullivan, Christopher O’Meara, E. Jason Wambsgans/Chicago Tribune/Tribune News Service

Delta Air Lines continues to go back and forth with CrowdStrike ahead of a possible lawsuit over its $500 million technology outage. Boeing came in for some grilling from the National Transportation Safety Board. Plus, Frontier Airlines just came up with a neat turn of phrase to describe industry-wide demand softness.

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Take a moment to catch up on what’s been happening in the world of airlines.

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Passengers waiting at a Delta Air Lines customer service counter
Passengers waiting at a Delta Air Lines customer service counter
Photo: Patrick T. Fallon/AFP (Getty Images)

After days of dealing with logistical chaos and upset customers, Delta Air Lines is rewarding its employees for how they handled the CrowdStrike technology outage that disrupted the carrier’s operations for the better part of a week. The Atlanta Constitution-Journal reports that Delta is giving each employee two free plane tickets good for anywhere the company flies. — Melvin Backman

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A CrowdStrike office building
A CrowdStrike office building
Photo: Justin Sullivan (Getty Images)

CrowdStrike is tired of taking all the blame for Delta Air Lines CrowdStrike meltdown. In a letter publicized by a reporter from The Points Guy, the cybersecurity firm’s legal team pushed back on some of the umbrage from the carrier regarding the internet security outage that grounded its flights for days late last month and cost it hundreds of millions of dollars. — Melvin Backman

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Surf breaks over the foundation on a house shaped like a boat in Horseshoe Beach, Florida, as Debby makes landfall
Surf breaks over the foundation on a house shaped like a boat in Horseshoe Beach, Florida, as Debby makes landfall
Photo: Christopher O’Meara (AP)

Tropical Storm Debby is leading to significant disruptions at Florida airports as it makes landfall. The plane-tracking website FlightAware reports that on Monday three airports in the state are among the ones with the highest number of cancelled flights as the storm makes its way across the northern part of the state. — Melvin Backman

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A 2006 photo of the American Airlines maintenance facility in Tulsa, Oklahoma
A 2006 photo of the American Airlines maintenance facility in Tulsa, Oklahoma
Photo: E. Jason Wambsgans/Chicago Tribune/Tribune News Service (Getty Images)

American Airlines is calling it early. — Melvin Backman

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The Boeing logo
The Boeing logo
Photo: Justin Tallis/AFP (Getty Images)

After a door plug blew out on a Boeing 737 Max 9 this January, the National Transportation Safety Board sprung into action trying to get to the bottom of what happened and why. — Melvin Backman

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A plane takes off from Charles de Gaulle airport where the olympic rings were installed on terminal 1, in Roissy-en-France, north of Paris
A plane takes off from Charles de Gaulle airport where the olympic rings were installed on terminal 1, in Roissy-en-France, north of Paris
Photo: Thibault Camus (AP)

Air Canada reported earnings Wednesday. In the second quarter, the company wrung C$466 million ($339 million USD) in profits from C$5.5 billion (around $4 billion USD) in revenue. Both of those numbers are weaker than they were a year ago. — Melvin Backman

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The door plug that fell off an Alaska Airlines Boeing 737 Max 9
The door plug that fell off an Alaska Airlines Boeing 737 Max 9
Photo: National Transportation Safety Board (AP)

The biggest mystery going into the National Transportation Safety Board hearings about Boeing’s 737 Max 9 door plug blowout incident remains a mystery. An initial NTSB investigation into what caused the coverup for an unused emergency door to disappear into the sky mid-flight this January found that four key bolts that were supposed to keep it in place were not bolted on. — Melvin Backman

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The Boeing CST-100 Starliner docked at the International Space Station
The Boeing CST-100 Starliner docked at the International Space Station
Photo: NASA (AP)

Boeing’s CST-100 Starliner spacecraft is still stuck in orbit, and it still remains unclear when it or its crew might come back to Earth. NASA representatives provided an update to the craft’s mission Wednesday suggesting that planning for a return trip might stretch from late this summer into late this winter — possibly aboard a vessel from Boeing rival SpaceX. — Melvin Backman

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A Qantas plane
A Qantas plane
Photo: James D. Morgan/Getty Images for Qantas (Getty Images)

Australia’s biggest airline, after an embarrassing airfare cancellation scandal, has done some soul-searching and decided that the ordeal was so mortifying that it has to claw back millions in compensation from its CEO at the time. Qantas announced Thursday that it would be revoking A$9.3 million ($6 million) in stock options from Alan Joyce for his role in the drama. — Melvin Backman

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Frontier Airlines planes
Frontier Airlines planes
Photo: Matt Patterson (AP)

Frontier Airlines just released its second-quarter earnings. It posted $31 million in net income on $973 million in revenue. The former number was above expectations but down from the same time last year, and the latter was up from last year but below expectations. — Melvin Backman

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Ryanair planes
Ryanair planes
Photo: Niall Carson/PA Wire (AP)

Ryanair CEO Michael O’Leary is famous for, among other things, his public complaints about how quickly (or, rather, slowly) Boeing delivers airplanes to his company. And since Boeing is struggling to build planes more quickly after regulator-imposed slowdowns following a door plug blowout earlier this year, Ryanair has an idea of what to do with that money instead. — Melvin Backman

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