Ebola is, INDEED, airborne. Here are two empirical studies showing airborne transmission from monkey to monkey, and pigs to monkeys, respectfully.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/7547435http://www.nature.com/srep/2012/121115/srep00811/full/srep00811.htmlNote the current outbreak of EBOV is 97% identical of the Zaire strain, which was studied in the aforementioned experiments.
There are a number of EBOV cases that indicate probable airborne transmission in this current outbreak, primarily among the medical staff. I would not say the current strain is wind-mediated like the influenza viruses, but it probably can be transmitted through air by inhalation or exposure to mucous membranes within 10 feet of an infected person.
There is also risk that this strain can mutate into a more transmissible strain due to the prolonged duration of serial passage (increasing number of infections and extended timetable of outbreak). To my knowledge (and I asked a top world-known virologist via tweet), the last known observation of this current EBOV's RNA sequence was about 4 months ago. Much serial passage has occurred since that time, meaning a mutation
cannot be ruled out. However, the virologist doesn't think it has mutated up to this point.