If you're looking into an on-grid 'feed in tariff' system I probably can't tell you much.
I've got a home built off-grid system and know a bit about solar panels, but I don't think you need to know much about the panels for an on-grid system.
For info there's another type of panel: Monocrystalline - these generally have the highest output per unit area, followed by polycrystalline, and then amorphous/thin-film. In terms of price per watt: mono was highest and amorphous lowest about 2 years ago, but mono have come down in price by a factor of two since then. Some of the amorphous are poor quality and best avoided; others are guaranteed as long as the crystalline types. The picture (if it has attached ok), shows my panels. the two inner ones are thin-film type, 64 watt each and guaranteed for 20 years; the outer two are monocrystalline 80watt each.
I'm not totally off-grid, but I try to stay within my solar supply - my mains electricity bill for last winter was £28

(cooker, immersion & washing machine).
mab
PS. Ambriel, a PC typically uses between 100 and 200w (not including the monitor, printer routers or anything else). taking 120w for a small one and 15p/unit that's 2 units/ day = £220 per year per PC

. You might want to re-consider turning them off - or replace them with laptops - or, next time you upgrade one, ask for a high efficiency PSU.