$14 Steadycam: build your own steadycam.
On a related note, I've started editing the Colombian documentary using Vegas 4.0 on my $800 Windows XP computer (+ $160 external 160 Gig harddrive).
I've already uploaded 3 hours of video in my project and Vegas hasn't flinched. I was worried about being able to edit 20 hours of video on my cheap machine, but now I feel confident. I love Vegas.
I skimmed through the manual today on the train (for about 1 hour), and I think I know everything I need to now. The interface is remarkably easy to learn, because everything maps to easy to visualize real-life metaphors.
One thing I'm trying to figure out that the manual didn't talk about much is how to organize all that video while editing. I created a "temp" track where I park stuff temporarily, a "final" track that should contain the final edit, and a track for each of my 23 tapes (so I can easily refer to my printed log that shows all the scenes on each tape with notes).
Vegas lets you add notes and stuff, but even after only having 2 tapes (2 hours) of video on their tracks and taking out cuts and moving them into the final track, I'm getting confused on how to manage this.
I am cutting out cuts of their track and moving them into the "final" track so I know which cuts I already used. I can then look at the tape 7 track for example and see if there's anything else in there (not yet cut out) that should make it into the final track. I think this will work.
I also created a "filler" track: images of mountains and roads and nature and such that can be used as filler pretty much anywhere in the documentary - as opposed to cuts of action or interviews that need a specific place.
Any ideas on organizing this stuff in while editing are very welcome!