Thank you, Rick, and welcome everyone to our fourth quarter and full year 2025 earnings call. At the end of 2024, we told you what we were going to do, and over the last year, we did what we said. We accomplished that by delivering on our commitments, stabilizing the business, normalizing channel inventory, improving execution, and positioning Lattice to capitalize on two of the most powerful secular trends shaping our industry: data center AI and physical AI. As we begin 2026, I am most excited to see that low-power FPGAs are being widely adopted at an accelerating rate, becoming the everywhere companion chips. With the Super Bowl still fresh on everyone's mind, I will use a sports analogy. The primary processors GPUs, custom AI accelerators, CPUs, and MPUs are the system's most valuable players or MVPs. These MVPs are powerful, but they cannot win a game, let alone a championship, without a team. And Lattice is that team. We provide the FPGAs, those everywhere companion chips, that perform many of the critical system functions. These include boot, fire sequencing, security, control, IO expansion, board and rack management, leak detection, power and cooling, bridging, sensor aggregation, sensor fusion, preprocessing, and many other valuable system functions. We do this across both data center AI and physical AI. We do this across all major markets – communications, compute, industrial, automotive, aerospace, defense, medical, and consumer. And we do this across some of the world's fastest growing applications: security, rack management, communication, quantum cryptography, humanoids, industrial automation, logistics, robotaxes, space, and AR/VR wearables. Those powerful companion chips provide pervasive interoperability across all these vital functions, markets, applications, and diverse suppliers. You can consider Lattice as Switzerland for data center and physical AI applications. The other big benefit of our companion chip strategy is that it drives sustainable, diversified growth across all markets and applications, which is helping us to deliver on our financial targets. And this companion role becomes foundational as AI workloads push system-level complexity higher and higher and drive to faster time to market. As AI servers disaggregate into processor boards, networking cards, security cards, power and cooling modules, storage, and other specialized blades, FPGAs show up everywhere in the data center. We are also seeing the same trend accelerating in physical AI. Intelligence is moving closer to the sensors where data is created. A single robot can have multiple vision sensors, including image, LIDAR, radar, and infrared, requiring fusion, aggregation, and preprocessing. In addition, humanoid robots could have dozens of motors requiring high precision and low latency control. Companion FPGAs sit beside those sensors and actuators to synchronize high bandwidth vision streams with real-time motion and deliver deterministic responses. Instead of software running on a microcontroller, Lattice FPGAs do this in hardware, making it easier to guarantee the same cycle accurate responses every time. Finally, in some cases, FPGAs can also serve as the primary compute, such as signal processing, real-time networking, and what has come to be known as far-edge AI. We, at Lattice, define Far Edge AI as near-sensor contextual AI with tiny or small self-contained models. And our momentum is building. For example, we recently won a design in a human-machine interface or HMI industrial robotics, and we are seeing the pull for applications under one tops and under one watt. We came out of our recent global sales conferences with strong momentum, reinforcing our optimistic outlook for 2026. We are seeing accelerated design win momentum in both data center AI and physical AI, and we are excited about the future ahead with our Tier 1 customer deployments. Now, let me turn to the numbers. In Q4, we delivered $145.8 million in revenue, up 9.3% sequentially - our strongest sequential performance in seven years - and up 24.2% year-over-year. Full-year revenue of $523.3 million was in line with expectations. Looking ahead, our Q1 revenue guidance of $165 million at the midpoint, representing over 37% year-over-year growth, reflects our confidence in a strong recovery and accelerated momentum. Our Q1 EPS guidance of $0.36 at the midpoint represents nearly 65% year-over-year growth as we expect to continue to deliver earnings growth that is faster than revenue growth. As you can see, we've got a lot of positive operating leverages. We are operating on mature nodes, which means our capital spending is more reasonable than competitors on advanced nodes. And this allows us to drive significantly faster EPS growth than revenue growth. New products remain a key driver for our long-term growth. In 2025, new product revenue grew approximately 70%. We remain on track for new product revenue to reach the mid-20% range as a percent of total revenue in 2026, entering the year with strong momentum as Nexus and AVANT adoption continues to broaden. Given the scale of the opportunities ahead of us, Lattice is investing for the future accordingly. Our 2026 slogan, "Go Big, Be Great," reflects our ambition and our commitment. We are making investments across silicon, software, systems, operations, and infrastructure to support growth at scale and to extend our leadership in small and mid-range FPGAs. In summary, 2025 was a year of disciplined execution and meaningful progress. We stabilized the business, built tremendous momentum in data center applications, advanced our product and software roadmap, and significantly improved operational performance, including the normalization of channel inventory. We entered 2026 with high confidence. That confidence is supported by a strong backlog, durable data center demand, industrial market returning to growth, expanding companion use cases, and continued new product ramps. Our focus remains on differentiated innovation, deeper customer engagement, and delivering long-term shareholder value. With that, I will turn the call over to Lorenzo for a comprehensive review of our fourth quarter and full-year results. Lorenzo?