- IT Office Moves
How To Plan an Effective IT Office Move in 7 Steps
18 Mar, 2025

£1099.90 inc. VAT
AI-generated summary
The Dell NVIDIA RTX 2000 Ada (16GB) is one of those “quietly sensible” workstation cards. For a UK business paying £916.51 ex‑VAT, you’re not buying it for gaming or for the sort of workloads that need the biggest CUDA/VRAM in the world—you’re buying it to make professional apps behave reliably: rendering, CAD/CAM, and heavier data/AI workflows where stability and predictable driver support matter more than raw bragging rights. If your users are on Windows or running mainstream pro software that benefits from NVIDIA’s ecosystem, this is a solid fit and usually good value compared with more expensive tier cards when the workload isn’t maxing out GPU compute.
I’d only say “don’t bother” if you’re buying it as a general-purpose upgrade for mixed users without clear GPU workloads. For office automation, light design, or casual visualisation, you’ll rarely see ROI. Also, if you’re specifically doing memory-hungry tasks (big models, very large scenes) and you know you’ll scale up, you may regret not budgeting for a higher tier. In short: buy it if you’ve got identified pro/AI graphics use and want dependable workstation performance; pause if the business case is vague or you’re likely to outgrow it quickly.

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
ASUS GeForce GT 710 EVO - Graphics card - GF GT 710 - 2 GB DDR3 - PCIe 2.0 low profile - DVI, HDMI, D-Sub - fanless

Asus
TUF-RTX5070TI-16G-GAMING

Asus
RS720A-E12-RS12/10G/2.6kW/8NVMe/GPU