- SEO
How to Optimise Your Website for Google AI Overviews
4 Apr, 2026
£2636.11 inc. VAT
AI-generated summary
Honestly, the Ryzen ThreadRipper 7970X only really makes sense if you *already* need that kind of heavy workstation compute—think serious multi-threaded workloads like large-scale video rendering, 3D work, big data crunching, heavy virtualisation, or people who regularly compile/build at scale. At **£2196.76 ex-VAT**, it’s not a “fast CPU” purchase; it’s a “we’ll win time and throughput every day” purchase. If your jobs are mostly spreadsheets, office apps, light design, or occasional dev, you’ll just be paying for cores you won’t use.
Where I’d say this is good value is when your current platform is a bottleneck and you’re being billed for time—render queues, render farms, VMs that get thrashed, or workloads that scale cleanly with many threads. Where it’s not: if you don’t have optimised software that actually parallelises well, or you’re pairing it with a budget cooling/power setup, the cost starts looking silly. Also, for many SMB/reseller customers, these ThreadRipper-class parts tend to be overkill unless the rest of the workstation—RAM capacity, storage, and platform quality—matches the performance intent. If you tell me what applications your buyers run, I can say whether they’ll feel the benefit or just spend big for no real-world gain.

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