Okay---you want to try to get a good toss--straight up and a little in front of you. Then you bring the racket back behind your back and flick your wrist while stepping into the court.
1) For this you need eigther 3 computers networked together with a hub/router (one the "server", I recomend gigabet ethernet).
2) Then, share your folders on the "server." I'd suggest using the same username/password on all 3 comps (makes accessing shares easier)
3) Map the folder on the server as a network drive (same map drive letter on both clients)
4) Save all your work to this mapped drive when editing.
5) You should be ok now.
notes: with 2 comps accessing the same files on the server, you may not get steady playback (ie will drop below 30fps). Render to the client computers. If you do not, it will render slower (data will go from server to client back to server).
The key is to make the mapped drive letter the same on the client comps. Then the veg file will have the same folders referenced that can be accessed on both clients. DO NOT use ANY local files or you will have problems.
Another approach is to have a copy of the footage on a separate Hard Drive - an external for max flexibility, then different parts can be worked on separately, rendered as avis and shared ... or simply exchange .veg files if all data is on both.
Do you mean a drawing of how the networkwould look? That's the easy part. If you had the money, you could goto CompUSA (or a store like that) and tell then you need 3 Gigabit ethernet cards, a gigabit router/hub, and 3 cables. Put the cards into your computers, then plug each card into a port on the router, then make sure the router is plugged into the wall. :)
However, i don't know if i could draw a diagram on how to setup drives.
Multiple personalities has been addressed before.
You need to buy 2 or more licences of Vegas, because technically, more than one person is using Vegas at the same time.
Zippy, try contacting local computer stores that cater to small/medium businesses. They're usually pretty good at giving info regarding servers. You could tell them specifically what you're trying to accomplish and they might be able to tell you what you need.
I'd suggest you print out this thread and show them Friar's recommendation.
I totally agree with Rex. Remember if the toss is bad, you don't have to swing. You can just let fall. Also use your knees. You want the point of contact on the racket to be at your full arm's length and you want your body's momentum going forward, not just your arm.