Sourcing a big screen Windows PC in Indonesia
Hi Davita, I couldn't resist looking at this requirement, particularly trying to work out how well you may go sourcing your needs here in Indonesia.
So first issue is big screen. I have browsed extensively on Waroeng Komputer, and most laptops are 14" a few are 15.6" and some are smaller blending into what is called netbooks. So if sourcing locally the two suggestions above make sense
1. DenpasarHouse suggests a 14" laptop with a big screen plugged in
2. Markit suggests a particular Lenovo that is a so-called all in one desktop computer
I think Indonesians just don't buy 17" laptops, so no one stocks them. If you bring in one from elsewhere, service for a screen problem (if ever needed) may be a headache.
And on the issue of which Windows, I would suggest ignoring the Windows 7 Luddites. Windows 8 has anti virus built in so you don't need add-ons like Avast or AVG which keep chattering to you which is their subtle way of nagging you to upgrade to a paid version. Windows 8 just does the job and doesn't chatter much. Another benefit of Windows 8 is the File History way of doing backups. You need an external disk (probably USB, or it could be Network Attached Storage (NAS) on your home WiFi router) and then you need to turn it on - but after that it just works better than any other backup strategy I have used up till now.
But that's a side issue - use whichever Windows appeals to you.
So I see you are currently comfortable with Acer, and you want a big screen, so I just picked an all-in-one computer, the ACER AZ5771 - i3-2120, W7HP which is on Waroeng Komputer at Rp8,700,000. There is a short review of it at
Acer All-In-One AZ5771-UR31P 23-inch All-In-One Desktop Review. It has a 23" screen, a wireless keyboard and mouse, some touch capability on the screen, and 4GB of memory and a 1 TB disk - both these better than most laptops.
There are many other all-in-ones listed.
You could buy on-line - this means emailing him, getting an exact quote, doing a bank transfer, then he ships via JNE. But you go to Jakarta so you could track him down in Mangga Dua, his name is Lijanto. I imagine he works out of a tiny space - he is not an Amazon with a huge warehouse, but he sources his products from retailers in the complex. Since the Rupiah has been falling against the $, his prices get a bit out of date and tend to be to low. So you may see this one at 8.7, and when you email he may come back and say its now 9.1 or something. But that is still under $800.
I hope these thoughts help.