Point-to-point (telecommunications)

When connected at a distance, each endpoint would be fitted with a modem to convert analog telecommunications signals into a digital data stream.

The ARPANET used leased lines to provide point-to-point data links between its packet-switching nodes, which were called Interface Message Processors.

With the exception of passive optical networks, modern Ethernet is exclusively point-to-point on the physical layer – any cable only connects two devices.

A hub provides a point-to-multipoint (or simply multipoint) circuit in which all connected client nodes share the network bandwidth.

The resources in such a connection can be released when no longer needed, for example, a television circuit from a parade route back to the studio.

A 1 Gbit/s point-to-point millimeter-wave link installed in the UAE
A point-to-point wireless unit with a built-in antenna at Huntington Beach, California