Thank you, Steve. And good afternoon, everyone. Q2 was another quarter of solid execution with revenue and earnings exceeding the midpoint of our guidance. Record sales in Industrial and Medical partially offset anticipated weakness in the semiconductor market, resulting in revenue of $416 million. Actions we took to reduce spending offset lower gross margins and enabled us to deliver earnings of $1.11 per share. Finally, improved availability of critical components enabled us to shorten lead times to our customers and reduce backlog to $645 million. Overall, we believe the year is shaping up as expected. We are on track to perform better than the market and substantially better than previous market cycles. Now let's review our financial results in more detail. Overall revenue was $416 million, down 2% sequentially and 6% year-over-year. Backlog exiting the quarter was down over $100 million sequentially, and in line with what we expected. As customers adjust their order patterns around shorter lead times. We continue to expect backlog to normalize to a level of $400 million to $500 million in the next two to three quarters. Revenue in the semiconductor market was $173 million, down 11% sequentially and 24% year-over-year. The sequential decline was better than our guidance, with strong revenue and high voltage for ion implant, initial ramp of new design wins and near record service revenues partially offsetting weakness in the broader semiconductor market. Revenue in the Industrial and Medical market reached another record at $128 million, up 4% from last quarter, and 22% from last year. Record quarter was driven by solid demand in several applications, such as automation, battery, and precision coding. In addition, improved parts availability helped us address part of the overdue backlog. Data Center computing revenue was flat sequentially and down 50% year-over-year at $59 million. Incremental demand softness in the enterprise server market was offset by higher hyperscale revenue on investments in AI applications by some customers. Supply constraints continue to prevent us from delivering our full demand. Finally, Telecom and Networking revenue was up 16% sequentially, and 46% year-over-year to $56 million, driven by substantially improved components supply, allowing us to largely fulfill overdue backlog. Gross margin was 35.6% approximately 50 basis points below our guidance, mainly due to unfavorable product mix. Premiums were paid for critical components improved again this quarter, but remained a meaningful headwind as costs from prior quarters rolled through inventory to the P&L. Looking forward, we anticipate mix to normalize and premiums to continue to gradually abate, resulting in gross margin recovering to the low to mid 36% range in Q3. In addition, actions we are taking to optimize our operations footprint and improve manufacturing efficiency are on track and should contribute to higher margins over the next few quarters. Finally, addition of a new manufacturing facility in Thailand in the next couple of years, will position us for further growth and enable additional consolidation into larger scale, highly efficient factories. This investment and related to consolidation are already contemplated within our objective of achieving gross margins of greater than 40%. Operating expenses were $98.5 million down from last quarter. Actions we took to manage our cost structure and control discretionary spending more than offset annual salary increases, which took effect during the quarter. Operating margin for the quarter was 11.9%, depreciation was $9.4 million, and our adjusted EBITDA was $59 million. Non-GAAP other income was $200,000 due to higher net interest income partially offset by foreign exchange losses. Going forward, we expect our non-GAAP other income to remain around breakeven given our levels of cash and current interest rates. In the fourth quarter of 2022, we initiated a restructuring plan to optimize our manufacturing operations, consolidate some of our smaller sites into our large facilities and achieve other targeted reductions consistent with lower volumes in 2023. We are on track to our plan and expect to see the full benefits of our actions translating to better margins over the course of 2024. Consistent with this plan, we recognized $3 million in restructuring costs in Q2 and expect to incur an additional 3 to $5 million in the second half. Our non-GAAP tax rate was 15.3% below our target of 18% to 19%, due to several discrete items and favorable mix of earnings. For 2023, we are now modeling our GAAP and non-GAAP tax rate at about 17%. As a result, second quarter EPS was $1.11 ahead of guidance down from $1.44 a year ago and $1.24 in the previous quarter. This level of quarterly earnings is approximately 2.5 times higher than trough earnings in the previous market cycle. Turning now to the balance sheet. Total cash and marketable securities at the end of the second quarter were $455 million, with net cash of $92 million. Cash flow from continuing operations was $24 million lower than last quarter primarily on timing of tax payments. Inventory decreased $9 million, or 2% sequentially, as we continue to rationalize our raw material inventory. As a result, inventory days were 132 and turns remained flat at 2.7 from Q1 to Q2. These payable decreased from 62 days in Q1 to 50 days in Q2 on timing of purchases. DSO decreased from 62 days in Q1 to 56 days in Q2. As a result, networking capital was 138 days. During the second quarter, we invested $17 million dollars in CapEx, in line with our 2023 CapEx plan of approximately 4% of sales. Looking forward, the majority of the spend related to the new Thailand factory is expected to occur in 2024. And to be largely funded within our CapEx run rate of 4% of sales. As a reminder, our factories are mainly final assembly and test oriented and are not capital intensive. During the quarter, we also made debt principal payments of $5 million and paid $3.8 million dollars in dividends. Turning now to our guidance, the demand environment continues to be mixed with pockets of strength in some markets, offsetting cyclical weakness in others. Consistent with our commentary from last quarter, we expect Q2 semiconductor revenue to be the low point for the year with Q3 revenue up sequentially and second half revenue being flat to up versus the first half. For our non-semiconductor markets in aggregate, given our strong performance in the first half, we now project 2023 revenues to be up slightly for the year. In total, we are forecasting our third quarter revenue to be approximately flat with Q2 at $450 million plus or minus 15 million. This outlook implies that second half total revenue will be roughly flat with first half and Q4 greater than Q3. We expect gross margin in third quarter to improve to the low to mid 36% range on better product mix, and lower component premiums quarter-over-quarter. We expect operating expenses to be about flat to up slightly in both Q3 and Q4 on timing of project activity related to our new product launches. As a result, we expect Q3 non-GAAP earnings per share to be $1.13 plus or minus $0.20. Before I pass the call to the operator, let me make a few important points. Overall, 2023 is progressing as we expected coming into the year. Our diversification strategy is enabling us to deliver substantially better financial performance than in prior cycles. With a more moderate impact to revenue given our strength in Industrial and Medical and earnings levels substantially higher than prior troughs. We continue to be focused on improving gross margins. We believe our efforts to streamline operations to cure critical parts, reduce material premiums, and improve mix towards higher margin products will enable us to deliver on our long-term gross margin target of over 40%. Combined with actions taken to manage our cost structure, we expect to drive meaningful operating leverage in our model in 2024, as volumes recover. With that, let's take your questions. Operator.