do you want air-integrated, or wrist-mount?
I think this is a little confusing. Air integrated (AI) and wrist mount are independent of each other. Air integrated means that the dive computer reads the pressure from your tank either through wireless communication or through being connected physically like a typical SPG. It adds the advantage of figuring out how much longer your air will last. Wrist mount or console mount are other options, completely independent of whether the computer is AI or not. However, as I'm sure you can imagine, a wireless AI is not the cheapest option.
If it helps you at all, I'm a college kid in the financial position associated with my point in life
, but dive computers are a big safety feature. They allow for longer/more dives as they calculate more accurately than a chart. I'm looking at getting a cheaper dive computer with none of the frills of a nicer one to see if I even use it. Then, if I decide I like it and want more....I'll gift it to the fiancee and buy a nicer one. It seems to me like the needs you mentioned are on most rather lower-end dive computers.....so which one you buy will be more determined by extra features (AI, nitrox/trimix, pc logging), reliability (name-brand over cheapie) and aesthetics/ergo. If you don't like how it looks and feels you won't wear it...and it won't help if you don't wear it.
I've never been diving with a computer before, but the benefit that I see of a computer is for longer/multiple dives like I said above. The first question you need to ask is do you need one? Well, I believe that if you're diving a lot you
NEED one. However, if you're doing a few dives a month then you're fine with a chart. I've only been diving with a computer once and ignored it the whole time. Now, if you can afford a computer and want one for the added safety...or you want one for the bling and "coolness" of getting one....then get it and enjoy it!! They really are the best safety device one can have, other than common sense and a good dive buddy.