- Web Development
The Guide to Video Content on Business Websites
10 Mar, 2026

£747.07 inc. VAT
AI-generated summary
The Lenovo RTX 2000 Ada (the 16GB version) at **~£622 ex-VAT** is a pretty sensible buy *if* you’re deploying it into a workstation-style setup where people need solid, reliable GPU acceleration for professional apps and GPU compute—and they want the card to behave nicely in Lenovo systems. In day-to-day terms, it’s aimed at workloads like 3D design, rendering, engineering/CAD workflows, and AI-assisted tasks where you benefit from the NVIDIA software ecosystem. For an IT reseller, this is the sort of card that tends to “just work” with the right drivers and is easier to support than oddball alternatives.
Why I wouldn’t buy it: if your main goal is gaming or general “more pixels” performance, this is the wrong tool (and you’re likely paying for capability you won’t use). Also, for teams doing heavy rendering/visualisation at scale, the value question becomes more about *how much GPU horsepower per pound* you’re getting—sometimes a cheaper option or a higher-tier GPU makes more sense depending on the software and whether it scales with VRAM/compute.
**Who should buy:** engineering/CAD, media/visualisation, or dev teams standardising on Lenovo workstations who need professional-grade NVIDIA support and a dependable mid-range pro GPU. **Who shouldn’t:** anyone buying purely for price-to-frames, or anyone expecting it to replace higher-end GPUs for demanding production rendering/AI training without checking their specific workload first.

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

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
RS521A-E12RS24U/1G/2kW/16NVMe/FAN/RH/GPU

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