With roughly 4 minutes searching ive found this so far

"The Silicon Valley area has been mapped many many times. There is little that I can add to what has already been said about the state of 802.11b in this area. Every Starbucks has an Access Point. Nearly every major company has one or several dozen. One thing I did observe. With this area being the high tech. capital, and all the press about 802.11b insecurities you'd think that most networks were secured. From the findings of Netstumbler it appeared that many of the Access Points were setup with insecure configurations."
Taken from
http://www.pasadena.net/vacation/
(Note this was last year)

Nutters on this page just driving around with em on their car roofs:
http://members.aol.com/homingin/dopantpix.html#pho1

A set up page:
http://www.antennasystems.com/broadband.html
Showing how little a set up would cost.


"Accordingly, the market has not failed to recognize the advantages of a wireless connection on amobile device. Manufacturers have introduced several new products, mostly based on the PalmOS, that integrate PDA features with a mobile phone and Internet access, and businesses havebegun to adopt these new technologies at an escalating rate. A recent study from IDC has shownthat this "convergence" trend will grow significantly over the next few years, reaching a level ofalmost 80 million wireless communicators and smart phones sold in the year 2005."
Taken from:
http://216.239.39.100/search?q=cache...en&ie=UTF8</a>

"... significant deficiencies in the WEP data encapsulation that renders its data privacy claims meaningless, regardless of the key size. Increasing the WEP key from 40 to 104 or 128 bits does nothing to increase WEP's resistance to attack. This is because the deficiencies are related to how WEP uses cryptography, not the key size. WEP's design attempts to adapt RC4 to an environment for which it is poorly suited, with potentially catastrophic consequences for its intended users."
From
http://www.netmotionwireless.com/res...s/security.asp

posts getting a bit big...enough...but theres some good info on it
that last page has some good articles n demonstrations....