Thank you, Steve. I appreciate the opportunity and the confidence that you and the board have placed in me. I want to share a little bit about my background as I start the process of introducing myself to our investors and analysts. Sixteen years ago, I was Alarm.com's twenty-seventh employee, settling into the company as the founding finance team member at my desk in a storage closet that also happened to serve as a hardware test lab for our engineers. Over the years since, I've been fortunate to work with Steve and many other talented people to help shape the company's strategy as it moves through various stages. Prior to our IPO ten years ago, I stood up a formal FP&A function. As part of this, I created and have continued managing our earnings guidance philosophy throughout our time as a public company. Thanks in no small part to his mentorship, I have been able to become a key partner to Steve and the rest of the executive management team here, providing a bridge between finance, strategy, and operational execution. I'm thankful to have the support of a strong finance and accounting team filled with tenured colleagues. I also want to thank Steve Valenzuela for his support, particularly through the smooth transition process. I'm excited to engage more directly with Alarm.com's investors going forward. I am happy to report a strong start to 2025 on my first call. SaaS and license revenue grew 9% year over year to $163.8 million, exceeding our first quarter guide of $160.3 million. We exceeded our guidance due to a handful of structural dynamics. EnergyHub was a primary contributor to our beat. As Steve indicated, EnergyHub's distributed energy resource management programs continue to grow rapidly, and enrollments in Q1 exceeded our expectations. Alarm.com security account creation activity in both the residential and commercial markets met our expectations during the quarter. We did not discern any material changes in account origination activity during the quarter due to deteriorating consumer sentiment or recession fears. During the first quarter, total revenue grew 7% year over year to $238.8 million, and total gross profit grew 9.4% year over year to $160.6 million. Total operating expenses were $130.9 million during the first quarter. Excluding stock-based compensation and other items we adjust from G&A for non-GAAP purposes, total operating expenses were $114.4 million, a 4.6% increase year over year. R&D expense in the quarter, inclusive of stock-based compensation, was $68.4 million, up 3.7% year over year. Excluding stock-based comp, it was $62.4 million, up 6.4% year over year. We are off to a nice start in driving some of the operating margin that we signaled late last year. GAAP net income grew 18.4% year over year to $27.7 million, and our GAAP EPS per diluted share was 52¢. Non-GAAP adjusted EBITDA grew 17.5% year over year to $43.5 million. Non-GAAP adjusted net income grew 11.3% year over year to $30.4 million. A combination of revenue growth, revenue quality, and operating leverage contributed to our profitability. Non-GAAP adjusted EPS grew 8% year over year to $0.54 per diluted share. We ended the quarter with $1.19 billion of cash and cash equivalents and produced $17.9 million of free cash flow during the quarter. I want to speak for a moment about the tariff environment. In addition to significantly reducing the company's exposure to products originating from China since 2018, we proactively built some inventory in late 2024 and early 2025 prior to liberation day. We have approximately nine months on hand, which is higher than we would carry in normal times. Outside of China, we are operating as if the baseline 10% tariff will remain in place. We anticipate passing that tax through when we start selling inventory imported under the new tariff policies. Our guidance incorporates this plan. To the extent that some component of our hardware revenue becomes a pure pass-through, gross margin will be diluted slightly even though gross profit dollars will remain unchanged. Related to this, let me share some thoughts on price elasticity. We and our service providers have experienced a period of hardware cost inflation in the past, specifically as a result of the global supply chain disruptions in 2022. Over a twelve-month period, the impact on Alarm.com's hardware pricing at that time exceeded 10%. We did not see meaningful demand deterioration. We have long-term symbiotic relationships with our service provider partners. Increasing prices is not a step that we take lightly. But given our experience in 2022, we think it's possible that we can approach the market together and pass through the current baseline tariffs without dramatically impacting demand. We're also mindful to consider that the macro backdrop in 2022 was different from today. We are therefore allowing for a little bit of a wider outcome in our revised hardware revenue guidance. I'll turn now to our financial outlook. For the second quarter of 2025, we expect SaaS and license revenue of $167.2 million. For the full year of 2025, we are raising our expectations for SaaS and license revenue to between $675.8 million and $676.2 million, an increase of $4.5 million over our prior guidance at the midpoint as a result of the structural outperformance from Q1. We are now projecting total revenue for 2025 of between $975.8 million to $991.2 million, which includes estimated hardware and other revenue of $300 million to $315 million. As I noted, we are implementing a wider range here as we navigate tariff and macro uncertainty. We are also raising our estimate for non-GAAP adjusted EBITDA for 2025 to between $190 million and $193 million, an increase from our prior guidance of between $188 million and $192 million. Non-GAAP adjusted net income for 2025 is projected to be $131.5 million to $132.5 million, or $2.32 to $2.33 per diluted share. This is an increase from our prior guidance of $130 million to $131 million, or $2.28 to $2.29 per diluted share. EPS is based on an estimate of 60.5 million weighted average diluted shares outstanding. As a reminder, this share count includes a full year of dilution associated with our outstanding convertible notes on an if-converted basis of 9.125 million shares split across two issuances. We currently project our non-GAAP tax rate for '25 to remain at 21% under current tax rules. We expect full-year 2025 stock-based compensation expense of $40 million to $43 million. In closing, I'll share my conviction that Alarm.com is strongly positioned for quality growth in the large and often underpenetrated markets that we serve. The executive management team shares a long-term vision and has built a company-wide culture of collaboration, innovation, and humility that will drive Alarm.com's long-term expansion. I am humbled and thankful to continue contributing to it. With that, operator, please open the call for Q&A.