- Cyber Security
How Cyber Essentials Plus Protects Against Ransomware
28 Jun, 2026
£680.35 inc. VAT
AI-generated summary
At £570 ex‑VAT, the NVIDIA RTX 2000 Ada is the kind of “quietly sensible” workstation card you buy when you need reliable pro graphics in a UK office/Studio environment, not a cheap render-mascot. It’s well-suited to people running GPU-accelerated CAD/CAM, digital content creation, simulation, and remote workstation workflows where driver stability and professional software support matter more than chasing the highest possible benchmark number. If your team routinely uses NVIDIA-certified apps and wants predictable performance for modeling, viewport smoothness, and acceleration tasks (especially with modern creator/pro workflows), this card tends to be a good value.
That said, I wouldn’t buy it for “general workstation” tasks if you don’t actually need CUDA/pro apps or GPU acceleration. For mostly office workloads, a much cheaper option will feel the same day-to-day, and for heavy rendering or large-scale AI training you’ll hit the ceiling quickly—at which point you’ll want to budget for a higher-tier GPU. Also, double-check that your workstation has the right power and physical fit for a workstation class card; these things look straightforward on paper but can be fiddly in real deployments. Overall: buy it if you’re paying for dependable pro graphics and real GPU acceleration; skip it if you mainly want graphics output, light media, or you’re aiming for maximum horsepower per pound.

Asus
DUAL-RX9060XT-16G-WHITE

Asus
ASUS Dual - Graphics card - GeForce RTX 5060 - 8 GB GDDR7 - PCI Express 5.0 - 3 x DisplayPort, HDMI - white

HP
RTX PRO 6000 Z8 Fury G5 Retrofit Kit

Asus
ASUS Dual - White OC Edition - graphics card - GeForce RTX 5060 Ti - 16 GB GDDR7 - PCI Express 5.0 - 3 x DisplayPort, HDMI - white