Thank you and good morning. I will begin today’s call with a general company update. After that, Jack Kober, our Chief Financial Officer, will review our Q3 results. When Jack is finished, I will provide revenue and earnings guidance for fiscal Q4 and then we will be happy to take some questions. Revenue for the third quarter of fiscal 2024 was $190.5 million and adjusted EPS was $0.66 per diluted share. During the quarter, we generated over $40 million of free cash flow, and we ended the quarter with approximately $521 million in cash and short-term investments on our balance sheet. Our business remains healthy and profitable, and we continue to generate strong cash flow while investing in future growth opportunities. In Q3, our book-to-bill ratio was 1.1:1. In our turns business, where orders booked and shipped within the quarter was 21% of our total revenue. Booking trends are one of the most important metrics we track as they are a leading indicator of future revenue. We recognize bookings can be volatile. However, we are pleased that this is the third quarter in a row that our bookings improved. It’s also the second time in 12 months that we achieved a quarterly book-to-bill ratio of 1.1. New order demand was strongest in our I&D and Data Center end markets. Q3 revenue performance by end market was as expected, with Industrial and Defense at $90.9 million, Telecom at $50.6 million and Data Center at $49 million. For the quarter, Data Center was up 13.6% sequentially, Telecom was up 7.1% sequentially and I&D was flat sequentially. I’ll note that our I&D business had record revenues in the prior quarter. Industrial and Defense is our largest market, and our I&D revenues have been steadily growing over the past few years. We believe the secular trends for the I&D market are favorable and our growth strategies are working. Our focus over the last few years has been strengthening our engineering capabilities to better serve these customers. For example, we approach our Defense customers as merchant suppliers of high-performance IC components. In doing so, we offer standard and custom IC and packaged solutions to support their needs. We embraced custom design projects, which we view as a great way to build strong relationships with our customers’ engineering teams. We also offer our Defense customers access to our wafer foundries in approximately 20 proprietary process technologies. In some instances, our Defense customers have their own wafer fabs and IC designers, but they are inclined to use DoD trusted foundries like MACOM to access differentiated process technologies. And we offer to design and manufacture custom component module and subsystem solutions, but only in areas where we have high MACOM IC content and true subsystem expertise, which typically revolves around millimeter wave, very high RF or microwave power, filtering and switching and specialized fiber optic subsystems. On last quarter’s call, I highlighted electronic warfare radar anti-drone and integrated battlefield systems as 4 examples of defense applications, which can utilize MACOM’s technology. We see a number of large opportunities across these and other application areas at our major Defense customers. As a reminder, our focus has been and will continue to be developing products and technology for the highest frequency, highest power and highest data rate applications. We are pleased that our newest technology and latest products are being evaluated and adopted by leading defense OEMs and government customers. And finally, I’m pleased to announce that during the quarter, we were awarded a special development contract from the U.S. Air Force. Under the contract, we will conduct research and development on microwave filter technologies using novel epitaxial and semiconductor processing. We are excited to begin the work, and we believe our efforts will help improve the performance of next-generation defense systems, which require more precise filtering. We are pleased to see that our Telecom end market revenues have stabilized, albeit in a generally weak environment for a few of our core submarkets. I’ll note, we are not seeing signs of a broad telecom recovery. However, as noted last quarter, we are seeing platform shifts at our lead 5G customer, which may result in revenue growth opportunities for MACOM over the next 12 months. In addition, we believe we are gaining market share at certain key 5G accounts. While global 5G network CapEx spending may have peaked, we are still excited about the growth opportunities in 5G networks. Our existing customers are providing MACOM more opportunities on the transmit and receive side of 5G radios as well as the high-speed digital and optical portions of the network. A bright spot in the telecom market is Satellite Communications, or SATCOM. We see opportunities to sell our products into a growing number of satellite constellations, which are delivering broadband Internet and direct to sell services to global customers. These systems typically operate at microwave or millimeter wave frequencies which plays to MACOM’s strengths. The Data Center end market continues to be a dynamic market with significant growth opportunities. The industry’s movement to higher data rates, combined with increasing number of interconnects that are required for next-generation networking and high-performance computing applications, are creating meaningful opportunities for MACOM. For example, a single compute cluster could use hundreds of thousands of cores or GPUs across hundreds of equipment racks. Connecting everything together requires large volumes of fiber optic and/or copper interconnects, creating a potential opportunity for MACOM. Within these complex compute architectures, there are typically a wide range of connectivity requirements, including GPU to GPO, switch to switch, network interface card or NIC to switch and DCI links. Connectivity requirements can vary by customer, including linked distance, protocol and physical medium. As a result, our strategy is to bring to market a product portfolio that offers solutions for short- and long-distance connections, utilizing NR