Now, to explain the rest in a simplified way:-
Voltage:- The electrical potential, measured with a voltmeter. Written as "V". A car battery is around 12 V DC (direct current). Household mains power is 240 V AC (alternating current). An AA battery is around 1.5 V DC. A rechargeable AA battery is around 1.2 V DC.
Amperage:- The electrical current that flows through something. You can measure with a ammeter. Written as "A". Sometimes you will see it written as mA = milliAmp = one thousandth of an Amp.
Items are often marked with the voltage required and the amps that they will consume from that voltage. The amps often vary depending what the equipment is doing - eg. is the mount slewing or just tracking? Is the heater on or off.
Wattage:- Equals voltage x amperage. Written as "W". 1 V x 1 A = 1 W. Sometimes written as mW. Also can be stated as "power".
Equipment might be marked with the wattage it will consume rather than the current. If you know the voltage needed, you can work out the current using W/V = A
A "regulated" power supply contains circuits that keep the output voltage the same regardless of the amount of current being drawn from it - up to the maximum of the supply. Most things work happiest if the voltage is not varying - so a regulated supply is often the best. The Dick Smith one is regulated.
An "unregulated" supply does not contain these circuits, so can be made more cheaply. The sort of place you might use an unregulated supply is for a resistive heating strap where all that really matters is the wattage that is being generated by the strap and not the voltage nor current in particular.
Can you look at the manuals/plates on each of the equipment and work out the voltages and current requirements? If all are 12V, then you need to add up the maximum current needs. Then it's best to choose a supply that will deliver at least 50% more than this so it doesn't have to run at its maximum.
Eric