Sorry, I meant the frequency of the transfers, not that of some synchronization signal, so 8000 or 8500 MT/s, as you say.
However that should have been obvious, because there will be no LPDDR5x of 16000 MT/s. That throughput might be reached in the future, but a different memory standard will be needed, perhaps a derivative of the MRDIMMs that are beginning to be used in servers (with multiplexed ranks).
MHz and MT/s is really the same unit. What differs is the quantity that is measured, e.g. the frequency of oscillations and the frequency of transfers. I do not agree with the method of giving multiple names to a unit of measurement in order to suggest what kind of quantity has been measured. The number of different quantities that can be measured with the same unit is very large. If the method of giving multiple unit names had been applied consistently, there would have been a huge number of unit names. I believe that the right way is to use a unique unit name, but to always specify separately what kind of quantity had been measured, because having only a numeric value and the unit is never sufficient information, without having also which quantity has been measured.
However that should have been obvious, because there will be no LPDDR5x of 16000 MT/s. That throughput might be reached in the future, but a different memory standard will be needed, perhaps a derivative of the MRDIMMs that are beginning to be used in servers (with multiplexed ranks).
MHz and MT/s is really the same unit. What differs is the quantity that is measured, e.g. the frequency of oscillations and the frequency of transfers. I do not agree with the method of giving multiple names to a unit of measurement in order to suggest what kind of quantity has been measured. The number of different quantities that can be measured with the same unit is very large. If the method of giving multiple unit names had been applied consistently, there would have been a huge number of unit names. I believe that the right way is to use a unique unit name, but to always specify separately what kind of quantity had been measured, because having only a numeric value and the unit is never sufficient information, without having also which quantity has been measured.