- AI
AI-Powered CRM Systems: A Complete Guide
20 Mar, 2026
£798.40 inc. VAT
AI-generated summary
The RTX PRO 2000 (Blackwell) is one of those cards that makes sense mainly when you’re standardising a fleet of workstations for workstation apps rather than for “maximum gaming per quid”. At **£676.70 ex‑VAT**, it’s priced like a serious pro tool, not a budget upgrade—so the value only really shows up if your users actually run workloads that benefit from NVIDIA’s pro stack (think AI-assisted workflows, GPU-accelerated CAD/CAE, simulation, rendering, and any environment that cares about driver stability and certified support).
I’d recommend it for **small engineering, media, architecture, or ops teams** who need reliable GPU performance in production software and want something more predictable than a prosumer card—especially if you’re buying in volume and want consistent behaviour across machines. I wouldn’t buy it “just because it’s NVIDIA” if your use is largely office apps, basic design, or occasional rendering—at that price, you could easily be overbuying for what the software and your team actually do. Also, check your specific workstation’s power/physical constraints and, crucially, that the software you’re running supports and benefits from the GPU you’re paying for. If it does, it’s a sensible, no-nonsense pro option; if it doesn’t, it’s an expensive way to end up with faster fans.

Asus
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HP
RTX PRO 6000 Z8 Fury G5 Retrofit Kit

Asus
ASUS ROG Matrix Platinum - 30th Anniversary Edition - graphics card - GeForce RTX 5090 - 32 GB GDDR7 - PCI Express 5.0 - 2 x HDMI, 3 x DisplayPort - box

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