Boeing did a second unmanned flight of their Starliner capsule. They had to repeat the flight after the first try was an unmitigated disaster with multiple failures. Biggest was failure of the maneuvering thrusters.
This time Boeing did reach the ISS and docked there. But again some failures of thrusters. Looking forward to how NASA will evaluate the results. Lobbying power may spare Boeing a third unmanned test after redesign of the thruster system.
In unrelated news: The contracts with SpaceX and Boeing give each company 6 crew launches to the ISS. With ISS expected to operate until 2030, NASA needs more than that, 2 crew launches every year. NASA had purchased 3 extra launches from SpaceX. Directly after the recent Boeing demo flight NASA purchased another 5 launches from SpaceX. That's now 14 launches from SpaceX, 4 of which have been done already. Plus 6 from Boeing. NASA has now contracted all launches needed until 2030, all extra launches going to SpaceX.
An article from Eric Berger on arstechnica on the matter.
NASA just bought the rest of the space station crew flights from SpaceX | Ars Technica
SpaceX also has a number of contracts with private customers.
Axiom space, who are building private space station modules, that will initially be docked to the ISS but will later form their own space station.
Polaris Dawn, a group that closely cooperates with SpaceX in space operations. They will do some Dragon flights initially, later switching to crew flights on Starship.