Thanks Justin. As you can hear from Justin’s comments, our growth in RFID and Premises continued gross margin expansion, and EBITDA strength show our business model continuing to strengthen, trending towards our long-term operating model of growth, gross margins and EBITDA margin. Now, every business is exposed to macroeconomic forces this year, but because of our technology position and the market segments driving our growth, we think results in our strategic businesses will continue to be strong. This means our business path is all about execution. Regarding macro forces let me address them quickly so then we can get back to execution for the rest of this discussion. Now, in terms of macro forces, one of the top concerns people have is recession risk. And our RFID focus on medical devices and healthcare, and our Premises focus on federal state and local government security are both categories that are strong, even during economic downturns. Regarding inflation and increasing interest rates, we’ve proven we can raise prices when our costs increase. We’re debt free and capital light. So interest rates aren’t a major factor. Now, geopolitical risks are also in everyone’s minds, but again, we have a strong position. If anything, in times of geopolitical risk investments in security increase and certainly government security budgets grow, which we’re seeing. Now regarding supply chains, nobody’s immune to some supply pressures these days. We’ve shown that we can manage supplies and costs so that our RFID and Premises businesses grow fast with strong margins. And we have the demand strength to keep our strategic businesses on track. If we need to we’ll maximize margins in our growth categories over our legacy business lines. We know supply chains are always a source of risk. So, we’re managing them closely. For at least the next couple of quarters though there’s going to be supply churn, but so far we’ve managed it and made real lifetime trade-offs to support strategic growth and strong gross margins. Longer term we’re even assessing near-shore and on-shore supply chain options to keep us in a strong supply chain position. We already manufacture in Canada and California. So, we’re positioned to expand near-shore activities if needed. So hopefully that addresses some of the macroeconomic topics on everyone’s minds. And we can certainly go into more detail in the Q&A, but now let’s turn back to execution. So with our expanded world class sales team, with the industry’s best engineers to support NRE projects and other design wins with deep relationships and technical expertise, engaged with a half dozen transformational programs and with our ongoing production capacity expansion, all the pieces are in place to drive the vision and target as we’ve set. RFID showed the 40% plus growth we expected and Premises grew in our target range of three times the industry growth rate. So how do our metrics look going forward? And how are we positioned to build our strategic leadership as an IoT company? Now, I updated the status of our transformational projects in my opening comments, and we can go into more detail in Q&A if there’s more interest. So, I’ll focus here on the wider base of NRE project design wins. Design wins are the clearest indicators of our business’ strength going forward. Leading in design wins drives more wins as customers go to the company that’s proven they can deliver. That brings more scale, more experience in IT, more reputational leadership, and a stronger moat around our lead in the market. As I mentioned earlier in Q2, we had 38 active NRE projects, more than ever in our history. This is up from the two dozen reported in Q1. We also finished a dozen in Q2 up from a half dozen completed that we reported in Q1. So with this growth in NRE projects, this is one area we added people in Q2, both in engineering and project management. We never want our NRE capacity to be a bottleneck. It drives future volumes. So it’s one of the few areas we expect to keep adding people to support NRE project demand. Now, in addition to the athletic shoe and golf ball projects, I mentioned earlier, we have NRE projects going for an NFC solution provider for sensor-enabled applications, including humidity, temperature, shock, and vibration, and other sensing. I also mentioned we have five new projects in medical devices, and four more in the cannabis and luxury wine and spirits category. Now, the more we can talk about, but each quarter, we’re trying to give a sense of the range of applications and categories with clearly major unit volumes like these. NRE projects are clear indicators of both industry leadership and future revenues, since most NRE engagements lead to shipping projects, and then long-term customer relationships that are the foundation of our growth and, of course, of our competitive mode. So these projects show that our growth drivers are in high margin, high ASP devices for IoT applications. From a vertical perspective, our focus continues to be medical devices, specialty retail, and industrial applications, which have higher margins and of course, higher switching costs. So turning to our other strategic lever, our technology partnerships are expanding our growth opportunities. As I mentioned in my opening comments in Q2, we expanded the capabilities of our Bluetooth RFID device with Wiliot. We’ve now implemented a full IoT pixel-enabled cold chain solution. This integrates traceability, authentication, temperature humidity, and capacitive sensing along with geolocation and timestamping all in one solution. The target markets for this technology, our medical devices, healthcare and pharma and food supply chains, all of which are sensitive to quality and cost as well as being recession-resistant categories. Now, there were other technology partnership activities across the software stacking in Silicon, and we can go into those in more detail in Q&A if there’s an interest. The third leg of our execution is our growing profile as the industry thought leader. Now, we made a lot of progress here in Q2. In addition to awards, social media presence, podcasts, and speaking engagements, we’re also expanding our leadership role in the NFC forum, which will announce more about later this month. We’re also honored to welcome Manfred Rietzler as a senior advisor to Identiv. Some of you know, Mr. Rietzler is the Founder of Smartrac. He was also their CEO and subsequently CTO over an eight-year period and on their board until their sale to Avery-Dennison. He’s made it clear to us and others in the industry that he sees our opportunity to be the leader in the category of advanced RFID. In announcing his role, Mr. Rietzler commented that he thinks we’ve established a true leadership position in the industry with an exceptionally talented team and innovations in the RFID-enabled industrial and IoT markets. Now this sort of endorsement for one of the most respected people in the industry is really powerful as potential customers assess working with us on advanced solutions and as partners and even employees assess becoming part of our team. It even has an effect on chip allocation decisions by some of the big chip providers. And this of course, all helps our business momentum. Now another key project for future growth is making sure we have the capacity and cost competitiveness to stay ahead of fast growing customer demand. We’re well along planning a second production site to leverage the expertise we have in Singapore, but with lower costs and an ability to expand production volumes. We’re likely to move ahead with an expansion in Batam in Indonesia. This is just an hour ferry ride from Singapore, but there’s room to build the capacity we need skilled people to lead and operate the facility and a cost base that’s very competitive with any location while easily leveraging the world class expertise we’ve built in Singapore. With this facility, we’re positioned to scale well beyond half a billion units annually, very cost competitively to support the expanded margins and to support some of the transformational projects as they scale up. Now, in addition to RFID capacity expansion, we’re continually working with component suppliers to keep our partners and our own operations running at full capacity. So that’s the execution picture for RFID business. We’re confident that our execution is best-in-class across our design wins, partnerships, industry leadership, capacity scaling, team expansion and supply chain. This gives us confidence and our plans for growth in our strategic categories, gross margins and operating margins through 2022 and 2023. So turning to Premises, we covered most of the growth drivers in the opening comments. With our strength demonstrated in Q2, in both commercial and federal markets as the seasonal buying cycles in government hit in Q3 we’re seeing budgets for security, continuing to grow in particular for highly secured end-to-end platforms where we’re the clear leader. So with all these growth drivers and with the 21% growth we delivered in the first half of 2022, we’re confident of the 20% to 25% growth in Premises. So to wrap up RFID is growing over 40% and Premises is growing over 20%. Our industry position and execution support these trends continuing in 2022 and 2023. In Q2, our RFID business grew at our expected long-term rate without the transformational projects kicking in. We’ll keep updating tangible progress milestones to confirm the solid position we have in each opportunity, as well as confirming and refining the scale of each. Now, the macroeconomic environment is tough, but we’re positioned well. In particular, we continue to work hard to stay ahead of supply chain shortages. Our priority is to be sure we drive our RFID and Premises growth while also sustaining gross margins. If supply chain issues require too much premium being paid on normal COGS, such that margins would be pressured. We’re raising price aggressively. Wherever we aren’t able to raise price fast enough, like in some of our legacy products, we’ll forgo revenues in order to support margins, as long as our strategic growth is kept up at all times. Now, as a result of this commitment and knowing supply chain and macroeconomics can have an effect on any business, we’re expanding our guidance range for 2022 to be $125 million to $135 million. Now we have plenty of chances to exceed this range, but as long as we’re supporting our RFID and Premises growth rates to meet our target model, we might forego some legacy revenues. It’s only responsible to make sure we’re meeting expectations. So our strategic growth gets total focus. Our margins continue to be strong, and we keep driving our transformational projects so they can drive growth well above our 40% baseline RFID growth. Now we expect the second half of 2022 to build on the trends in Q2. RFID growth accelerated, gross margins expanded beyond our target for the year RFID driven NRE projects, reach record numbers and revenue strengths in RFID offset legacy revenues where cost increases would’ve pressured margins. The progress on RFID and Premises growth, gross margins, strategic initiatives, and our increasingly high profile industry position are all encouraging for growth and profitability of our strategic businesses. So with that, we’ll open the discussion for questions. And once again, we’re joined for the Q&A by Dr. Manfred Mueller, our COO and GM of Identity and Amir Khoshniyati, Vice President and General Manager of our Transponder business. So I’ll now ask the operator to open the line for questions. Operator?