Thanks Jim. Good afternoon everyone and welcome to our first quarter fiscal 2025 earnings conference call. Thanks for joining us today. Just as a heads up, we do these live and I managed to have a cough with a little bit of a tickle, so I don't think I'm going to be able to get through with -- all of this without coughing but if I'm good I'll hit the mute button and you won't catch them, but I apologize if I cough in the middle here. I'd like to start with a quick summary of the highlights of the quarter and spend some time giving an update on what we're seeing across the key markets, areas addressing for semiconductor test and burn-in, including increasing traction in some new markets. I also plan to spend a little time on our latest expansion in the burn-in market with our acquisition of Incal Technology this last quarter. Then Chris will go over the financials in more detail and after that we'll open up the lines to take your questions. We finished the first quarter with revenue and non-GAAP net income ahead of consensus estimates and are off to a good start to our fiscal year. Silicon carbide wafer level burn-in test systems and full wafer contactors are poised to be a key contributor to revenue against this year. But we're also forecasting material bookings and revenue contributions from several other markets this fiscal year, as we're successfully executing on our strategy to expand our test and burn-in products into other large and fast growing markets such as artificial intelligence processors, gallium nitride power semiconductor, hard disk drive components, and flash memory devices. My plan is to cover each of these markets beginning with the wafer level test and burn-in for silicon carbide devices. We've been seeing a stabilization and increasingly positive discussions within the silicon carbide power semiconductor market over the past quarter. The silicon carbide market continues to feel like a typical new technology adoption cycle, which often starts with early enthusiasm and rapid growth projections from early adopters, followed by a period of adjustment and slower growth, and a bottoming of that growth before higher growth resumes to new highs. Electric vehicle suppliers are clearly moving towards silicon carbide and integrated modules, combining silicon carbide MOSFETs into single packages to meet the industry's power, efficiency, and cost-effectiveness demands. Some EV suppliers are shifting to integrated modules, contain up to 32 or more devices in a three-phase inverter module. Due to the need for extensive test and burn-in of these devices to ensure reliability for mission-critical applications such as EVs, the benefits of conducting the screening at the wafer level before integrating them into modules are very clear. The process improves yields, reduces costs, and this is driving demand for wafer level burn-in, an area where Aehr Test stands as the low-cost leader and proven solution for this critical testing. In recent weeks, Aehr has presented at several industry shows, including the PowerUp Conference in Italy three weeks ago, as well as the ISES Power Semiconductor and the ICSCRM conferences in the US over the past two weeks. The overall message from these conferences is that EV manufacturers are standardizing on modules with some even moving towards entire integrated inverter systems supplied by the semiconductor companies themselves instead of the traditional tier 1 suppliers of the past who served as a middleman. The key takeaway from these trade conferences, as well as conversations with EVs, auto OEMs, is the critical importance of the testing and burn-in process to eliminate early life failures that would otherwise occur once these devices are integrated into inverters or full drive units in electric vehicles. Silicon carbide suppliers have varying opinions and standards when it comes to quality, leading to significant shifts in market share as some suppliers struggle to meet the integration and quality demands of EV manufacturers. For Aehr, this presents a positive opportunity as the market shifts towards suppliers that are capable of delivering integrated systems and high quality products. We're making steady progress on our previously announced benchmarks and engagements with new silicon carbide device and module suppliers. We're confident that we will add several new silicon carbide customers this year, establishing our solution as their tool of record for volume production. Additionally, silicon carbide is gaining traction in applications beyond electric vehicles, such as solar, industrial, and data centers, which will expand our addressable markets. We're highly optimistic about our silicon carbide business and expect it to gain momentum over the next few quarters. Our silicon carbide customers are forecasting capacity expansion needs in calendar 2025 with several anticipating purchases of one or two systems in early 2025 followed by production volumes in the second half of the year and ramping further into 2026. Separate from incremental system capacity increases, we continue to see strong demand for our Fox WaferPak full wafer contactors for silicon carbide and other markets for our installed base of FOX-XP and FOX-NP wafer level test and burn-in systems, driven by a record number of new device designs started this past quarter. These designs are expected to lead to additional WaferPak purchases for engineering qualification, as well as to volume production orders as they advance to production. We had another solid quarter for WaferPak sales generating over $12 million in revenue from WaferPaks alone in the first quarter. Now let me move on and discuss our progress with test and burn-in -- in gallium nitride power semiconductors. We're now in negotiations with our first gallium nitride customer, or GaN customer, for volume production wafer level test and burn-in of their devices. We've been working closely with them and over the past year they have purchased and we have delivered a significant number of WaferPaks to successfully qualify a wide range of GaN device types aimed at multiple different markets, including consumer, industrial, and automotive. In addition, we had increased discussions and engagements with multiple potential new GaN suppliers about their needs. The data collected from multiple GaN companies shows that these devices will need burn-in to meet the requirements of many of the markets they're targeted for, particularly industrial and automotive applications. We believe GaN is a significant up-and-coming technology for power semiconductors. With a forecasted compound annual growth rate of more than 40%, to over $2 billion in GaN devices sold annually by 2029, GaN has the potential to be a significant market opportunity for Aehr's wafer level solutions. It's also interesting to note that several of our current and prospective customers, value the fact that Aehr can provide proven test and burn-in capabilities that successfully address both silicon carbide and the GaN devices. The testing of each is quite different. However, we can address the requirements of each market with the unique proprietary features and capabilities in the same system on our FOX platform. We continue to make investments in our platform with new capabilities and enhancements that enable us to provide value to these customers, expand our markets, and maintain our leadership position as a low-cost proven solution. So moving on to the artificial intelligence processor market. Last quarter we announced that an AI accelerator company committed to evaluating our FOX solution for wafer level test and burn-in other high-power processors. This evaluation is very far along at our Fremont facility where multiple wafers are being tested using our proprietary WaferPaks and new high-power FOX-XP and NP systems which provide up to 3,500 watts of power delivery and thermal control per wafer. We are delivering over 2,000 amperes of current to a single 300 millimeter wafer, allowing us to burn in a large number of processors in parallel with our proprietary test modes. This company is working closely with us to be able to use the FOX-XP system for wafer level production burn-in of their processors, which would prove to be more cost effective and significantly more scalable than doing the screening later in their manufacturing process. We think this presents a significant opportunity to displace the current package and system level tests for AI processes for large language model development and we believe we can meet this enormous challenge with the current capabilities of our new high-power FOX-XP system. This evaluation is progressing very well and once we demonstrate successful wafer level test results and throughput, we anticipate they will adopt our high-power FOX-XP systems for production of their next generation AI processors beginning this fiscal year. As we've noted before, based on the production forecast, we believe they could potentially be more than a 10% customer for us this fiscal year alone. Turning to our acquisition of Incal. During the quarter, we announced and completed our acquisition of Incal technology, expanding our product portfolio to include Incal's highly acclaimed packaged part reliability burn-in and test solutions, particularly its ultra-high power capabilities for AI processors, GPUs, and high-performance computing processors. These advanced high-power capabilities, combined with Aehr's industry-leading lineup of wafer-level test and reliability solutions, position us strongly to capitalize on the significant and rapidly growing opportunities in the AI Semiconductor market. This acquisition greatly expands our addressable market, enabling us to provide a comprehensive turnkey solution for reliability and testing from engineering to high volume production, to the rapidly growing AI semiconductor market. We're excited to bring the combined strengths of both companies to market as we begin engaging with Incal's customers, including many AI industry leaders. Customer feedback on this acquisition has been overwhelmingly positive, with several meetings held over the past few weeks where some customers indicated increased forecasts for engineering qualification, as well as for volume production. Last month, we were pleased to announce the first volume production orders for Incal's new Sonoma ultra-high-power semiconductor test and burn-in solution for test of AI processors. These orders were placed by a large-scale data center hyperscaler that provides computing power and storage capacity to millions of users worldwide today. We've also had many customers express interest in Incal's medium power Tahoe system, which is being used today across multiple market applications for both qualification and volume production. This includes multiple medical companies that use the Tahoe system's special capabilities for production test and burn-in of devices in a critical medical device application. This speaks to the special capabilities of these systems and the quality of their hardware and software to meet the critical traceability requirements of the US Food and Drug Administration. The integration with Incal is progressing well, and employees from both companies have been very positive about the combination. We have already shipped several systems since the acquisition, and with Incal being just down the road from us, we plan to consolidate personnel and manufacturing into Aehr’s much larger Fremont facility by the end of the fiscal year. As we've mentioned before we're underway with an upgrade and remodeling of our Fremont headquarters this year, in fact right now, and are ensuring our facility infrastructure meets the needs of both companies. So turning to the hard disk drive market, last quarter we also announced a key customer in the hard disk drive space that is now forecasting a production ramp up starting this fiscal year for a new high volume data storage device application. This customer is finalizing their capacity requirements and we expect this ramp to drive orders for multiple FOX-CP production systems and WaferPak contactors with shipments likely occurring in the second half of this fiscal year. As we've noted before, they could even be a 10% customer for us as well. As some of you may recall, this is a major customer that we announced in 2019 pre-COVID that purchased our FOX-CP, our single wafer test and burn-in solution for wafer level test and burn-in their devices in this very high volume application for enterprise and data center market. We see the data storage market along with various devices supporting the global 5G expansion as new growth opportunities for our systems, as these markets require devices with exceptionally high levels of quality and long-term reliability. And lastly, let me talk about the NAND Flash Memory Market. We're excited about the ongoing progress of our benchmark with a leading flash memory manufacturer we announced last quarter. This benchmark is aimed at assessing the potential of our FOX-XP solution for wafer level test and burn-in of their flash memory devices. This evaluation focuses on providing 100% test and burn-in for devices intended for high reliability applications such as enterprise storage. We're currently developing a new high-pin count fine pitch WaferPak that can support flash memory requirements but can also support DRAM testing, should customers choose to pursue DRAM burn-in in the future. Our objective remains to complete the proof-of-concept by the end of this fiscal year, positioning us to secure a commitment from this customer to develop a production test cell with the potential to contribute to revenue in our fiscal 2026, which both -- begins next June. As I've noted before, we believe this is the front end of an exciting and potentially enormous opportunity for our solutions and we see the NAND flash market, as a key market opportunity with long-term potential to also move into DRAM wafer level test and burn-in. With all these customer engagements, market opportunities and the products to address them, we're very optimistic about the year ahead, and we are reaffirming our financial guidance for revenue growth and profitability for the year. With that, let me turn it over to Chris before we open up the line for questions.