Ok, cool, I figured it must have been the same person since the questions were so similar.
OK, now that I know what year car you have then the story changes dramatically.
Here is my psuedo write-up on this procedure (you don't need to remove the heads or go nearly as far into tear down as I did).
https://picasaweb.google.com/996pcarnut/Engine (From my thread http://forums.rennlist.com/rennforums/996-forum/644150-1-rebuilt-engine-1-month-and-325-pictures-later.html which includes several links to engine drop DIYs)
First and foremost if you plan to do this yourself get your hands on the 996 workshop manual.
Unfortunately on the 1999-2001 year cars, replacing an actuator is not an easy task compared with the later 3.6L engines, nor is it very cheap to do. Brand new, the actuators run about $700 and the solenoids are about $150. You can find used parts for a lot less, but unless you are in a bind financially I wouldn't cut any corners here.
The actuator and solenoid (1 per side) are both under the camshaft cover. In order to replace them you have to lock the camshafts in place with a special tool (I made my own but also later bought two types of factory tools). Then you remove the camshaft cover. Next you have to use another special tool to compress the actuator mechanism so you can replace it. The camshaft cover then gets reinstalled with a 1-1.5mm bead of Loctite 5900 or Dreibond and 23 cam cover bolts torqued in a very specific sequence. That is a very tricky part, and you should also replace the cam cover bolts with new micro-encapsulated ones or at least clean and apply silicone to the existing ones.
The last thing you have to do here is re-time the engine, this is a critical part. There are several write ups on this, but this is by far the best one I've seen for this MY car:
http://986forum.com/forums/performance-technical-chat/26418-diy-setting-cam-timing-m96.html
You can do the procedure with the engine in car, but honestly having had my engine out three times now, and removing and reinstalling the actuators the same number of times, I wouldn't attempt it myself with the engine in car. With my big hands I would probably spend just as much time fumbling around in tight spaces and screw something up. Dropping the engine is really not as difficult as it may seem. The first time through you might spend a day at it but once you are good, I did it for my third time in just under 4 hours. Reinstall perhaps a little less. This is with a manual car of course.
And I would certainly love to help out, but I'm over towards Tahoe near Auburn, CA. If you decide to do this all on your own and are still in a bind I suppose if you paid my gas and maybe a little something more (would have to work that out through PM), I could head over to the bay area with all my tools. We could probably do it in a full long day.
If you do plan to do this and your friend mechanic has not worked on a Porsche before I encourage the both of you to read as much as you can about doing this before diving in. It's not rocket science, but there are plenty of opportunities to do things wrong.
There is a Porsche dealer, Sonnen Porsche in the bay area who has great pricing if you buy online.