Thank you, Brad, and good day, everyone. Thank you for your interest in Daktronics, Inc. The Daktronics team produced another solid quarter in the third quarter. We anticipated the usual seasonal pattern with fewer days to complete order bookings and to fulfill revenue, and also typical adverse weather conditions that did prevail in the quarter. But because this was anticipated, we took steps in the field and in our manufacturing to continue the year-over-year growth that we have now produced over each of the last four quarters. As Brad mentioned, orders grew about 8%. Remember, last year in the third quarter we booked a $30,000,000 stadium order. This year in quarter three, we also had a number of larger orders, including one stadium order on the last day of the quarter, but the single largest deal in the third quarter of this year was $13,000,000. Importantly, our orders have now been relatively broad-based at or over $200,000,000 in each of the last five quarters, including a record Transportation order in the third quarter. As orders have grown, so has revenue. We had $182,000,000 in the quarter, which grew more than 20% year over year, mostly due to efficient order conversion by our manufacturing teams during the quarter, which included working more than one shift at times to fulfill the extra order flow around the holidays. Gross profit margin in the quarter was essentially flat to the year-ago quarter at 24%, reflecting a variety of factors: one, the benefit of operating leverage as revenue rose year over year relative to fixed costs in our cost of goods sold; secondly, the efficiencies we have achieved up and down the supply chain as a result of the business transformation initiatives that have been undertaken in the last year; and thirdly, mix on new business was a little bit better in the third quarter than previously. These margin benefits were offset by the fact that backlog fulfillment in the quarter was largely from the lower-margin Live Events business line. More importantly, last year did not contain any reciprocal tariffs or any other of the newer tariffs that were only introduced late in 2025. We had an extra $6,000,000, for example, of total tariff expense in the third quarter of this year. The sequential gross profit margin declined from 27% to 24%. The main factor there was fixed-cost operating leverage which, as previously described, when revenue is going up, it typically goes up faster than our fixed costs in COGS, and on the way down, it just has the opposite effect. So our revenue declines a little faster than the fixed-cost side of cost of goods sold. Daktronics third quarter 2026 net income after tax was $3,000,000, or $0.06 per fully diluted share. This quarter included nonrecurring expenses related to management transition and acquisition expenses of $1,600,000, or adjusted net income of $4,600,000. Last year's third quarter net loss of $17,200,000 included a $14,000,000 fair value adjustment on the convertible note that has since been converted and also contained $3,600,000 of consultant-related expenses associated with the business transformation initiatives and corporate governance matters that pertained last year. Adjusted net income a year ago, therefore, was about $500,000, so we are up quite substantially from there. After removing the nonrecurring expenses and noncash benefit, our third quarter 2026 net income rose significantly on an adjusted basis. Since we have solid earnings, we are able, starting this year, to take advantage of the new tax laws permitting accelerated depreciation for R&D and other expenses. On a pretax basis, operating income for the quarter was $1,900,000 compared with an operating loss of $3,600,000 in 2025. In addition to the nonrecurring items, the company incurred a $400,000 expense for the first time as it absorbed the expert developers that Brad mentioned before from XPC. The impact of the intellectual property adjustments on the Daktronics balance sheet is negligible. We had a small gain offset by a write-down of the remaining loan that we had to XDC from Daktronics. So negligible balance sheet impact and about a $400,000 impact on operating expenses for the one month that we absorbed so far the new team. Let me now turn to segment revenue. This table, if you remember, shows at the business-line level, over a period of time last year and then sequential quarters as well, the percentage of our revenue coming from each of our business lines and the margin most commonly we are earning on each of those businesses. It also shows the gross profit margin earned in the third quarter. This gives you some sense of how business mix is impacting our revenue. As indicated a couple of times, most of our revenue growth this past year has derived from the fulfillment of Live Events projects, typically lower-margin projects. So that is what is coming through on the revenue line. We did have a small amount of revenue in the quarter coming through the orders, but as Brad alluded to before, this quarter in particular we had a little bit of a skewing towards the back end of the quarter in terms of the new order growth, and as a result, the revenue contribution from that will land in the fourth quarter as opposed to the third quarter. So, again, most of the revenue coming through in the third quarter was from backlog. I should mention that in Live Events, the fulfillment that we have is heavily engineered with high dependence on indirect installation costs. The next slide shows you our segment product backlog, and last quarter we highlighted for you again that most of the revenue coming through from the backlog was Live Events. The product backlog stood at $342,000,000 at the end of the third quarter, continuing to be up—up 25% from a year ago. Particularly with the recent major wins, our backlog remains high and remains weighted towards Live Events. We are now starting to convert the major projects that we have talked about over the past couple of quarters, which will be a feature of our revenue growth in the fourth quarter and into the early part of 2027. This gives us, as you would imagine, a multi-quarter runway on our revenue and a more predictable growth pattern and stronger revenue recurrence over the next couple of quarters. The combination of a high backlog, as I have just alluded to, coming into the fourth quarter with what we are seeing as a good pipeline already in the fourth quarter—good order momentum—sets us up well for a good top- and bottom-line finish to the year. Let me now move to the next slide and talk about our balance sheet, which, as you may remember, has been substantially strengthened over the last three or four quarters. This slide shows you how we are managing working capital and capital allocation. First, our inventory levels have moderated relative to revenue over the past several quarters. Our manufacturing team has done a really good job efficiently managing inventory. This is one of the initiatives that we undertook in the business transformation projects over last year, and this reflects again better alignment and improving efficiency in our working capital management. During the first nine months of the year, we repurchased approximately 1,300,000 shares of common stock at a volume-weighted average price of $17.60. That leaves us with about $17,000,000 worth of open share repurchase authorization. Since the company reinstituted its share repurchase program in late 2024, the company has repurchased 3,360,000 shares of stock at a VWAP of about $15.15. We ended the quarter with a cash balance of $144,000,000, an increase of 13% from 2025. So we continue to run a relatively strong cash balance, even with the share repurchase activity. We essentially are keeping a very strong balance sheet to give us the resiliency and adaptability to continue to generate strong returns for our shareholders going forward as we use cash and capital of the company for shareholder benefit. We have converted our commercial bank backup credit line from an asset-based facility to a cash-flow facility, reducing its cost and providing the company with additional financing flexibility if necessary. We, of course, have no borrowings under the company's bank line of credit, and none are contemplated at this point in time. We now turn the floor over to Ramesh.