- IT Office Moves
The Complete IT Checklist for Moving to a Serviced Office
18 Jan, 2026







£1204.34 inc. VAT
AI-generated summary
Honestly, for most UK B2B buyers the **£1009.40 ex‑VAT** pricing on an **ASUS Prime RTX 5070 Ti** is only “a good deal” if you *actually* need that tier of GPU. If you’re doing general office AI use, light design, or standard CAD that isn’t GPU-heavy, you’ll likely overpay versus a cheaper card that still does the job. Where it starts to make sense is for teams running **GPU-accelerated workflows**—rendering, heavier model inference/training in the middle-of-the-road range, or compute-heavy design/visualisation—where having more headroom prevents you from throttling performance (and buying upgrades sooner than you planned).
On value-for-money, the **Prime** line is typically “sensible” rather than flashy: it’s built for reliability and consistent thermals, which matters in real deployments (workstations that run all day, not hobby rigs). That said, this is still a high-end spend, so I’d only recommend it to buyers who can clearly justify the workload and uptime requirements. If your environment is more about budgeting, scalability across multiple seats, or you don’t have a proven GPU-dependent bottleneck, I’d **hold off**—the smart move is usually to match the GPU tier to measurable performance needs, not to buy “because it’s fast.”

Dell
NVIDIA RTX 4000 Ada Generation - Graphics card - RTX 4000 Ada - 20 GB GDDR6 - PCIe 4.0 x16 - 4 x DisplayPort

Asus
ASUS GeForce RTX 3050 LP BRK 6GB - OC Edition - graphics card - GF RTX 3050 - 6 GB GDDR6 - PCIe 4.0 - HDMI, DisplayPort, DVI

Asus
RS720-E11-RS12U/10G/2.6KW/12NVMe/OCP/GPU

HP
NVIDIA T1000 - Graphics card - T1000 - 8 GB GDDR6 - PCIe 3.0 x16 - 4 x Mini DisplayPort - for Workstation Z2 G9, Z4 G5, Z6 G5, Z8 G5