Hi
I am also type 1. The first thing you have to do is pick a meter that you like. You can either buy this yourself, online or from a chemist or your DSN may give you one. Some meter companies will also send you a free meter of your choice. Then you will need to go to your GP to get your prescription for test strips changed.
My favourite meter is the Abbott Freestyle Lite. I like it because it takes the smallest blood sample available(0.3 microliters) from a variey of test sites eg hands, fingers,upper arms, forearms,calves and thighs. It also has a 60 second top up period, so if you fail to get enough blood on the strip the first time you have a whole minute to apply more. In addiction to this the strips suck blood from either side. The other nice feature it has is that it has a light on the strip port so if you are testing in the dark you can see both where to put the strip and the blood and then when it has sucked enough blood it switches on the back lit display so that you can read the result. Abbott will send you any of their meters for free and they usually come very quickly(mine came within 48 hours of ordering it).
The only things that I don't like about it is the software that it comes with to upload your results to the computer and the fact that it has no tagging option.
Hope this helps.