Thanks, Jackie, and good morning, everyone. Thank you for joining us for our third quarter 2023 earnings call. As a management, we have established over many years a good track record of running a profitable and sound business. In addition to remaining profitable in the third quarter, we have been profitable for 45 of the last 50 quarters and every year for the last 12 years. We have also spent the last four years on the development of our new generation of underwater products and solutions, including our Echoscope PIPE and our Diver Augmented Vision Display system, DAVD, which underpins our growth strategy. We believe that the company has almost unrivaled potential with a unique product set at a time when the market will expand. Against these impressive metrics, management's core focus continues to be on organically growing the company. Despite disappointing results due to low order take in the third quarter, we remain optimistic about our business and the pipeline of opportunities we're pursuing and the strong momentum we're having in our core target market, the defense space. In addition, we have maintained a strong balance sheet and do not envisage the requirement for new capital to fund our growth plan. Our Marine Technology Business has two business models. These are outright sale of our technology and rental and associated services. The main reasons we have not met our third quarter financial goals are: firstly, although our Marine Technology Business continues to increase its quality of pipeline of opportunities, order conversions have slowed, principally outright sales from Asia and, in Europe, for rentals and associated services due to a fall in the number of offshore wind projects; secondly, our UK services business has also experienced significant delays in receiving orders because the priorities of its defense customers temporarily shifted to land-based defense applications to support the requirements in Ukraine. This has affected naval requirement projects, the areas where we provide our solutions. Turning to the company's outlook for Q4. Although we continue to be profitable at the end of this third quarter, we are behind on our full year 2023 business plan financial goals. As a reminder, we had been working to a revenue plan of $26 million overall for fiscal 2023. Due to the delays we have experienced year-to-date in converting opportunities into firm orders, we are reforecasting fiscal 2023 and now believe our results will be more in line with our financial year 2022 results. We continue to be laser-focused on our core strategy to grow the business and, as a management, we remain completely committed to this. As we focus on growing the business, we continue to believe we have significant opportunities around our Echoscope PIPE and DAVD solutions, including spin-off products such as the DAVD Digital Audio standalone product. I'd now like to summarize our third quarter results. In the third quarter, our Marine Technology Business order intake was down significantly. This is due to two reasons: First, we have seen a slowdown in new European offshore wind projects being initiated. This has impacted on our rental and associated rental services revenues. It is widely reported, including on Bloomberg, that the cost of these fixed price offshore wind projects has soared 40% compounded by higher interest rates thus requiring renegotiation. Orsted, Vattenfall and Siemens, the big players in the wind market, have all reported significant revenue decreases in this sector. Our Echoscope cable monitoring and laying solution is used in this market. Second, we also saw reduced order take in key geographies, Japan, China and South Korea. In these geographies, our technology is used primarily in underwater construction and offshore wind applications. Though we have continued to increase our pipeline of opportunities and believe that our inquiries and quotation levels are good, we have experienced significant delays in converting these into orders for the business. As a result of these factors, revenue fell in the Marine Technology Business and was $2.9 million in the third quarter compared to $4 million in the previous third quarter 2022. Despite the decrease in revenue in the third quarter, we do not believe that this is due to anything systemic or loss of our market position in the areas in which we excel. We believe it reflects the slowdown in offshore wind in the European market; the delays in European offshore service providers entering the U.S. offshore wind market, as reported by the likes of Orsted; and delays in converting opportunities emanating from Asia into firm orders. We believe that in the fourth quarter of 2023, we will see some of these opportunities materializing into orders. Within our current business strategy, the two pillars of growth for our company are our Echoscope PIPE real-time 3D imaging sonar and our recently launched Diver Augmented Vision display system, DAVD, which is in adoption by the U.S. Navy. I will therefore focus the rest of my remarks on these two pillars. Firstly, turning to the Echoscope and progress in this area in the third quarter. The underwater imaging sonar market is growing largely due to the new generation of underwater vehicle focused on bringing new capabilities to the subsea and underwater market. Recently, it was announced that the U.S. Navy has now standardized the Videoray Defender as its preferred solution in the small underwater vehicles category. In general, the new generation of underwater vehicles present new capabilities, which in turn is fueling the demand for more capable sensors such as ours. One of the key emerging requirements for the defense market for this class of vehicle is real-time 3D spatial perception and scene awareness technology. And in keeping with the U.S. Navy selection of the Videoray Defender, we were selected for an executed trials on this platform with Naval Information Warfare Center, NIWC, in our third quarter. It continues to be our strategy to work on further increasing the number of new defense underwater vehicle programs in which the Echoscope technology is embedded and trials like these are a key precursor to such success. In the third quarter, as part of a second phase defense navy program, we completed and delivered for customer evaluation a full survey grade diver handheld solution, which embeds our Echoscope PIPE imaging sonar and the DAVD for the Navy and which will be used for high-resolution real-time 3D mapping and inspection in ship hull applications. Also, in the third quarter, a coordinated trial was planned and executed at the San Diego Naval Information Warfare Center, NIWC, facility to support the need for real-time 3D inspection and critical mapping from a small man portable remotely-operated vehicle, ROV. The trials flawlessly and successfully showcased the Echoscope's capability to perform real-time 3D inspection, target identification, and high-resolution mapping, as well as uniquely allowing the ROV pilot to fly the ROV in zero-visibility conditions using the live real-time 3D display from the Echoscope PIPE. In addition to the NIWC vehicles team, other U.S. and UK Navy attendees were able to witness the demonstration. Evaluation of the trial result is ongoing with different related departments. We also received, in the third quarter, very favorable mission results from three of our defense customers who have selected, integrated and recently demonstrated our Echoscope technology on their subsea vehicles. These programs vary from small vehicles to larger vehicles, all greatly benefiting from the real-time 3D volumetric data unique to our patented Echoscope technology. Notable also, as these defense customers have success with the technology on one of their programs, they take the same solution into other programs. For example, one defense customer has expanded the use of our technology on four different vehicle programs. We continue to believe that there is significant momentum around our Echoscope-based solutions. Secondly, now turning to our progress on the DAVD in the third quarter. As a reminder, the tethered DAVD system has now moved from the Navy's R&D phase to their field adoption phase. As part of the continued fleet field rollout, in the third quarter, we performed two crucial training events. SWRMC in San Diego received their initial DAVD training as new user group to the DAVD family. SWRMC is responsible for all ship maintenance and diver salvage in the busy San Diego area, and they have already been able to utilize the DAVD system on a live mission. Additionally, UCT in Port Hueneme received additional DAVD units. In the third quarter, we trained the Navy's newly appointed Field DAVD Super User, who has been brought onboard to work with the Navy DAVD Program Manager specifically to ensure the operational success of the newly fielded DAVD system. On an ongoing basis, we will support joint field missions as part of the Field DAVD Super User's onboarding process. During the quarter, we also supported U.S. Navy dive inspection and salvage operations in Maui in response to the recent devastating wildfires where the DAVD Echoscope Inspector System was used for real-time 3D mapping and monitoring the underwater environment. In the third quarter, we continued to make progress on the two variants of the DAVD system, tethered and untethered. By way of progress on adoption, a major European offshore provider has completed its findings on the DAVD tethered system trials, which they performed in our second quarter. Quoting directly from their report, they concluded that, "The advantage of the DAVD alone, compass, depth, taking snapshots and presenting graphical information for diver and supervisor, or combined with a 3D live sonar video stream is clear and increases safety and efficiency. The 3D sonar fits well within our scope of work and our survey division is aware of this. We think that the combination of DAVD and 3D sonar has potential within our organization." This provider is one of the Big Four global dredging companies that together control 80% of the global dredging capacity and have confirmed their intention to adopt the DAVD and we are working on a model for initial adoption. We also have made progress with the DAVD untethered variants. DAVD untethered prototype systems were delivered to our project sponsor earlier this year as part of their evaluation program. We have made further progress in this quarter and have been awarded initial further funding of approximately $750,000 out of a total contract value of $1.8 million. The scope of delivery for this funding is supplying eight evaluation system and performing further customization work. This is significant because for the first time another foreign Navy has co-opted into the U.S. Navy DAVD program. We're still optimistic that this variant will move forward to field operation in financial year 2024, subject to successful completion of the evaluation stages, and we continue to focus on completing the funded customization work package. Turning now to trials and adoption discussion. We have good quality discussions ongoing with a second major European offshore provider where we have completed customization work necessary for their specific helmet and rebreather system, and we planned some field work with this customer later this year with a DAVD system. We also provided in the second quarter commercial terms to a major Japanese offshore construction company who is an established user of our Echoscope. We have since made further progress and have been invited to conduct a pre-adoption DAVD training with this customer later this month. Also in this month, we will also be demonstrating the DAVD to several interested Japanese customers in both the defense and the commercial sectors at the same time. We're also excited about the second phase trials with the Spanish Navy later this month in Alicante, Spain, which forms part of our continued DAVD World Engagement program. They are interested in both the tethered and untethered variants. We continue to believe that the likely inflection point for the DAVD is in financial year 2024 where we hope to have acquisition budget lines established with a broader customer base, including foreign navies and commercial offshore service providers. To restate, despite challenges with order take during the quarter, we have good traction and momentum behind our solutions and believe we have achieved key milestone targets around these. As we work towards closing fiscal 2023, we remain confident about our longer-term goals to grow the business, and we believe we are well positioned for this. Now, turning to our Marine Engineering Business. This business supplies sub-assemblies into broader mission-critical programs under contract with prime defense contractors. This gives them the opportunity to have repeat orders for these sub-assemblies through the life of the program. We continue to reiterate this segment is important for our group as we have a strong pedigree in defense engineering with stellar relationships with prime defense contractors spanning decades. These are important relationships for our growth strategy. There's also a strong crossover of engineering skills, which is vital for us to maintain our competitive lead in real-time 3D imaging sonar and our diving technology. Year-to-date, the UK part of our services business has experienced significant delay in receiving orders. This is largely due to their defense customers' priorities having switched temporarily onto land-based applications related to Ukraine, which has temporarily put naval-based requirements on hold. This delay has affected order take and has also contributed to our business being off plan. Approximately $2.5 million worth of orders anticipated in the first quarter of our 2023 financial year have not yet been released for the reasons outlined earlier. We will continue to work towards restoring the services business to its $10 million revenue profile over the next two years. Finally, before we discuss our third quarter financial performance in greater detail, I wanted to briefly mention our most recent leadership appointment. Last week, we announced the appointment of John Price as our new permanent Chief Financial Officer effective on November 27 of this year. John is joining Coda with more than 28 years of experience working in financial roles, having served as the CFO of NASDAQ-listed Assure Holdings Corporation since 2021. John brings a seasoned background in corporate finance and accounting, along with key public company and technology industry experience. We look forward to welcoming John to the company later this year, and we would like to thank Gayle Jardine for her work as Acting CFO in the interim. Let us now turn the call over to Gayle to walk you through our financials before I provide my closing remarks. Gayle?