Nvidia’s entry level GPU can handle 66 million pixels, enough to feed two 8K monitors — but it is its tiny 70W power consumption that will get jaws dropping

Nvidia RTX 2000 ADA Generation is 1.5x faster than its predecessor

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Nvidiahas unveiled theRTX 2000 ADA Generation, a powerful yet energy-efficient addition to its workstation GPU lineup. As you can guess from the name, it’s built around Nvidia’s cutting-edge Ada Lovelace architecture, meaning users benefit from third-generation RT Cores, fourth-generation Tensor Cores, CUDA cores, and AV1 encoders.

The seventh SKU in Nvidia’sworkstationGPU series is centered around the AD107 GPU, and reportedly delivers up to 1.5x the performance of its predecessor, the RTX A2000, in professional workflows. It’s particularly well suited for fields like 3D modeling, rendering, data visualization, and video streaming.

Nvidia says the RTX 2000 ADA also has potential in embedded applications and edge computing, where it can power real-time data processing for medical devices, optimize manufacturing processes, and enable AI-driven intelligence in retail environments.

70 watts

70 watts

RTX 2000 ADA Generation’s low-profile, small form factor means it doesn’t need external power connections, and only requires a maximum of 70 watts of power to run. It comes with 16GB of GDDR6 of graphics memory, which is more than was rumored when we first heard about it, and 4GB more than the RTX A2000.

The new GPU is equipped with four Mini DisplayPort 1.4a ports, enabling it to support four4Kscreens at 120Hz, or two8Kdisplays at 60Hz. However, if your requirements include DisplayPort 2.0/2.1 compatibility, this GPU isn’t for you.

Highlights of the new card include:

The Nvidia RTX 2000 Ada is available now, priced at $625.

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Wayne Williams is a freelancer writing news for TechRadar Pro. He has been writing about computers, technology, and the web for 30 years. In that time he wrote for most of the UK’s PC magazines, and launched, edited and published a number of them too.

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