Since I'll never be a great skater, maybe I can do for skating what I know - write software.
There is already professional grade software to choreograph figure skating routines (for singles, couples, groups). I'm sure it is wonderful, and deals with all sorts of things beyond my ken like difficulty, skating standards, and scoring. All of which a coach should know, so I would ignore. But licenses start at a few hundred dollars / per year. I hope that is a bit steep for some coaches, but that a $10-$20 purchase price would be reasonable.
A coach would create a routine, and send pattern(s) and animated stick figure(s) to the skater(s), possibly timed to music. Animations won't be realistic enough to fool anyone, nor will you be able to get feedback on your own attempts or implant a chip in your brain to make it happen, but you could send friends a stick figure animation, with your face, doing something you "can" do.
It's a very ambitious software project (maybe too ambitious), but it would be fun, and I would learn a few things along the way.
SO: Do you folks know any free or reasonably priced good resources on all the common moves (individual and team - e.g., freestyle, Dance, Free Dance, Synchro, Precision, Production, Show)?
ALSO: Does anything cheap along these lines already exist?
One of the hardest parts is going to be finding a lists of all common moves in all the disciplines. Once I have that, I can look on-line for videos.
I don't care how to do the moves, or what the standards are. Just more or less what they look like (e.g., videos), so I can create moving stick figures and blade tracings.
As mentioned in another thread, I know about the ISI Test Standards DVD and Handbook, and the USFSA Basic Skills DVD and Instructor's Manual (mine is old), though I have to be careful about copyrights and use restrictions. But there are many common moves they don't cover.