RTX 2000 Ada: professional power in a compact format

Published on May 18, 2026 | Translated from Spanish

NVIDIA introduces the RTX 2000 Ada Generation, a professional graphics card designed for workstations where space is critical. Its low-profile form factor allows integration into compact systems without sacrificing the performance needed for CAD and 3D modeling applications. With 16GB of GDDR6 ECC memory, this solution aims to meet the needs of engineers and designers working in space-constrained environments.

professional workstation interior, compact RTX 2000 Ada graphics card being installed into a slim low-profile chassis, engineer hands securing the bracket while a monitor displays active CAD software interface with complex 3D wireframe model rotating, surrounding cables and cooling fans visible, engineering visualization style, metallic card surface with subtle blue LED glow, dust-free clean room atmosphere, sharp focus on card components and mounting process, realistic industrial lighting, photorealistic technical render

Ada Lovelace Architecture for Demanding Workflows 🚀

Based on the Ada Lovelace architecture, the RTX 2000 Ada incorporates 2816 CUDA cores and support for third-generation RT Cores. This accelerates ray tracing rendering tasks and simplifies the manipulation of complex assemblies in software like SolidWorks or Autodesk Inventor. Its 70W power consumption makes it viable for modest power supplies, while the 16GB of VRAM facilitates work with high-resolution textures and simulations without relying on system memory.

The card that fits where your coffee can't ☕

If you've ever cursed your workstation for taking up more space than your ping-pong table, the RTX 2000 Ada is your salvation. With its low-profile bracket, it promises to fit into chassis that seem designed for an ant with rendering aspirations. Of course, be prepared to explain to your colleagues why your new PC has a graphics card that looks like a toy, but outperforms their tower with RGB fans. And if you're lucky, there might even be room for a second cup of coffee.