IKnowNot,

Could you explain that a little more? Naturally, as with anything else, someone is going to try and find a way to crack it. To my knowledge there is nothing out there yet, unless you know of something.
Rather than print the same information over, let me give you a link to an excellent Flash tutorial on cracking WPA

http://www.crimemachine.com/Tuts/Flash/WPA.html

The attack uses airforge to create a de-authenticate packet and aireplay to inject the packets [both tools from the aircrack suite] Ethereal for capturing the EAPOL WPA packets and cowpatty for brute forcing.

Now, before you say...brute forcing only works with weak passwords, I realize this! That is why I said earlier that using a complex password does go a long ways towards providing a degree of security. But on the other hand, you should see my user/password file for such attacks. It goes WAY beyond a standard dictionary file! [although a complete dictionary file is included! Merged, sorted and uniq'ed from several different dictionary's!] My User/pass file also contains other languages, computer specific terms, a complete 1337-speek'ed dictionary, etc, etc, etc! About the ONLY passwords my password file CAN'T crack are passwords which include symbols, passwords that are only made up of sentence initials [i.e, this is my example password=timep] and those sorts. It really is one hell of a password file! So....knowing this, I am sure that I am not the only one out there who has such a password file. Therefore, an attack such as the one above concerns me. Obviously I do use a complex password. Usually 16 characters or so, alphanumeric, includes symbols, etc. My password file could not crack a password such as these types of passwords that I use, and most likely neither could anyone else's. About the only thing that would crack it, would be a true brute force attack in which every possible combination of keyboard characters was tried. And that of course would take literally forever.

So, on that note....I know that I am reasonably safe from such an attack. I could probably watch such an attack happening without having to worry about if they were going to get in or not. But I do still have my concerns about it.

In regards to your quotes about WiMax IKnowNot, THAT I did not realize. I hadn't heard about that, but I don't like the sound of that either! Which would make me focus in a little more on 802.11i