Thanks, Sumit. 2022 has indeed been a transformational year for us. Not only did we take a giant leap forward with the launch of MAVIN for our customers last year, but we also announced the combination with Ibeo. This deal further positions as well to become one of the most experienced LiDAR hardware and software companies in the market. I'm pleased to report that we achieved all the milestones we had laid out in 2022. Also, we continue to show tremendous financial discipline as a mature public company in Q4 2022 net cash used in operating activities of only 8.4 million. This equates to an annualized net cash used in operating activities of under 34 million on a run rate basis, which is slightly better than our guidance of 40 million. As a mature public company, we will continue to differentiate ourselves from our competitors through financial discipline, transparency, and guiding to metrics that we believe are realistic and achievable. Before we talk about full year '22 financial results in a bit more detail. I would like to discuss how the Ibeo acquisition significantly accelerates our trajectory and transforms our roadmap into the future with new products and access to new customers. Based on our current suite of products and visibility, we will be providing our financial outlook for one year out that is 2023. Additionally, I will be providing several details and inputs to help investors quantify the impact of the Ibeo acquisition and model the business through the end of this decade. The Ibeo acquisition is indeed an inflection point for MicroVision. Our teams worked around the clock to close the acquisition much sooner than our expectations. We are very pleased and excited about the 250 employees in Hamburg and Detroit, who became a part of our 100-plus team based in Redmond and Nuremberg on January 31, 2023. Operationally, our teams have already demonstrated that seamless integration of MAVIN with Ibeo's perception software, paving the path to future integration in our custom ASIC. We now have strengthened our position as a formidable LiDAR hardware and software company with 350 employees a have very strong talent pool of hardware and software engineers spread across four offices in the U.S. and Germany. This acquisition now positions us as the only LiDAR company in the market, able to offer such an extensive product portfolio to a broad range of industries. Number one, our biggest market focus continues to be an ADAS, with the addition of perception software, we are better positioned than ever to compete for design wins this year. Number two, our anticipated revenue stream is now expanded with revenue-ready products like the short-range flash-based sensor for non-automotive customers in a large market comprising industrial, smart infrastructure and robotics applications. And third, high margin revenue from auto-annotation software providing validation of sensors for OEMs and Tier-1s. Our IP portfolio is strong and deep and now consists of an impressive 735 patents more than any of our peers. We also now have over 50 years of combined experience developing technologies that our current LiDAR solutions are built on, which is far more than our very young LiDAR peers in the market. I'm very pleased to continue demonstrating our financial rigor and discipline strategically deploying capital to execute this opportunistic transaction to acquire Ibeo for a purchase price of €15 million. This investment brought us and experienced and highly talented team of engineers, targeted customer relationships and a broad product portfolio. In fact, we're now benefiting from the past R&D investments done by Ibeo of over €200 million deployed over several years. This considerably reduces our go-to-market timeline and allows us to leverage these products to generate high margin revenue for the go-forward company. Our updated investor presentation on the MicroVision website includes helpful information about us and our markets. Now, let us talk about how the size of the market we compete and now has significantly increased due to this transformational deal. Let's talk about the biggest market which is ADAS market. We're now seeing that OEMs may be looking for a comprehensive LiDAR sensor panel with vendors providing both long range for highway high speed highway pilot and multiple short range for 360-degree view. L2+ is expected to require one long range LiDAR and two short range LiDARs per vehicle, while L3+ is expected to require two long range LiDAR and four short range LiDARs for vehicle. While we continue to hear ASPs from our peers at around $1,000, our design and ethic enables us to price our LiDAR at 500 depending on volumes greater than 10 million units. We believe short-range LiDAR will have an ASP of about $200. And we believe it will have larger volumes than long-range LiDARs. If we simply use this ASP estimates applied to the projected number of vehicles expected to come out of production, we estimate that the total LiDAR market the generate at least 82 billion of cumulative potential revenue through 2030 for the entire market. We have seen our competitors talk about a TAM of 150 million by 2030, while we believe that that a big market may be possible, our estimates are based on a more rational and a mathematical model. Please note that we have not even considered any revenue coming from the L4, L5 capabilities, which we plan to access or tap into with our sensor fusion chip that would fuse to MAVIN LiDAR and an array of radars to enable safety at lowest cost to enable L3, L4 features down the road. In the near-term, we are highly focused on the monetization of the L2, L3 opportunities with strategic investments in the technology to enable L4 features towards the later half of the decade. The non-automotive market, while we have seen a variety of estimates from our peers and reputable business consulting firms, we have estimated on a similar basis the cumulative revenue potential through 2030 to size the total non-automotive market. For industrials, we expect this market to be at 2.5 billion in 2025 expected to grow at an estimated 20% CAGR. If we sum up the total by every year through 2030, we estimate that the total sales in the industrial market will be our cumulative 32 billion by 2030 for the entire market. Extending the same match to non-automotive smart infrastructure sub segment, we expect this market to be at 2.8 billion in 2025 and grow at 30% CAGR. If we sum up the total by every year through 2030, we estimate the total sales in this market will be accumulative of 46 billion by 2030. And lastly, for robotics, we expect this market to be at 1.8 billion in 2025 and grow at a 50% CAGR. And if we sum up, the total sales in this will be cumulative 37 billion by 2030. Now adding all these three sub-verticals within the non-automotive market, we expect the total cumulative revenue potential or size of the market to be at 115 billion. Let's talk about the third market, which is the validation and auto-annotation software. Let me spend the time talking about what this is. This is a specialized market with not a lot of players competing. As a reminder, this software provides ground truth data generation to reference against the sensors OEMs are trying to validate. The key advantage of our validation software platform is that it enables sensor suite including MicroVision LiDARs and third-party LiDAR to process and detect surrounding 360 degrees. A modular approach to enable different sensor setups and enable any use case set-up. And lastly, parallel processing due to cloud-based architecture. While it is hard to estimate the TAM for this software, we estimate that we may be able to conservatively generate 200 million to 300 million in revenue through 2030. We believe the demand for this software will increase in the upcoming quarters as OEMs strive to validate more and more sensors. Now let's distill down to what it means for us as a company and our business outlook. Our 2023 financial objectives, we expect revenue of 10 million to 15 million. As described, this revenue will include MAVIN sales to OEMs flash-based sensor says to non-automotive customers, and reference software sales to OEM and Tier-1 validation partners. We expect a high gross margin as a large portion of this revenue relates to software solutions. From an expense standpoint, we expect the net cash used in operations to be between 50 million and 55 million, which is the net effect of the cash coming from the incoming revenue and our increased cash OpEx due to the acquisition. While there may be some cost synergies available between the two companies including IT and some consolidation opportunities, our focus is on accelerating revenue for 2023. While we do not provide long-term guidance, the following measures of success can help investors build a model for MicroVision. We are increasing our internal targets to 3.5 billion to 5 billion cumulative revenue potential through 2030, up from the 2 billion to 4 billion, primarily due to the increased opportunities and the markets I described earlier. For automotive, we expect to sell more short-range flash-based sensors at $200 per piece. This brings incremental revenue stream on top of the MAVIN. For non-automotive, we expect that we will be able to capture 1% to 2% of the total market size of 115 billion translating into [1 billion or 2 billion] [ph] in revenue for us. For the validation business, as we described, we expect to capture 200 million to 300 million revenue through 2030. Adding these incremental revenues on top of our core product, we expect on the conservative side an addition of 1.5 billion more revenue compared to our prior estimates of market opportunity. This higher revenue should correspondingly translate into incremental EBITDA potential as well. I'm very pleased that an investment of 15 million as a purchase price for Ibeo assets can potentially yield 1.5 billion entire revenue opportunity through 2030. Now let's discuss Q4 and FY '22 results. For the fourth quarter, Microsoft communicated to us that there were no units delivered in that quarter. As we have stated previously, our revenue recognition is directly tied to the number of units delivered by Microsoft, hence no revenue was recognized in Q4. As a reminder, this revenue is attributable to the contract executed in April 2017 with Microsoft for using our technology in their AR display products HoloLens 2. As of December 30, we have an unapplied 4.6 million balance left on this contract liability. Our agreement with Microsoft continues to be in effect with an expiration date of December 2023. Please note that no cash has been received for this [indiscernible] revenue in the last several quarters as we received an upfront cash payment of 10 million at the contract signing in 2017 and apply recognized revenue against that prepayment. We had shipped some LiDAR samples to customers in Q4 2022, as we previously announced. We did not build or recognize revenue for these shipments as we shifted our focus to the acquisition of the Ibeo assets, which would allow us to ship an integrated product with perception software as part of it. Please note that these sample sales are intended to be sold to the OEMs with the clear objective to demonstrate our capabilities, so that we put our best foot forward for the upcoming RFI and RFQs. Hence, we decided to pause the sample sales for the fourth quarter to instead wait and supply OEM customers with an integrated solution with Ibeo perception software. The shipped samples in Q4 were thus deemed to be a part of our tests and evaluation program. Expenses. In terms of expenses, this was one of our most efficient quarters with our cash burn being only 8.4 million per quarter. This was in line with our expectations as I had provided in our prior call. Q4 R&D expenses totaled 7.6 million compared to 6.5 million last year. The increase was primarily driven by higher salary benefits, non-cash stock-based compensation and higher non-direct labor expenses. SG&A expense totaled 6.4 million in the fourth quarter this year as compared to 6.6 million last year. The decrease was primarily due to higher non-case stock-based compensation, higher salary and benefits, offset by higher marketing and consulting expenses last year. For the full year, I'm very pleased that the 38 million cash used in operating activities was well in line with our guidance. The annualized fourth quarter net cash used in operating activities came in just under 34 million. This demonstrates our strong financial discipline. In these times of uncertainty and weaker macroeconomic conditions, MicroVision stood out and beat competitors in terms of maintaining a healthy burn rate and headcount with a strong balance sheet. We have been prudently investing and not following the spend aggressively modeled as most of our peers who now have to announce some headcount initiatives. As expected, CapEx in the fourth quarter of 2022 was 2.3 million, which was driven by build outs and tenant improvements in the new facility that we moved into at the beginning of this year. We expect to recover this investment through the contractual incentive payment agreed to be paid to us by the incoming tenant in our previous building. Going forward in 2023, we expect CapEx to settle back to its original levels. Now let's talk about our cash position. As discussed during our Ibeo acquisition call in December last year, we took advantage of the ATM facility to finance the Ibeo acquisition. In 2022, we utilized our ATM program for net proceeds of 14 million as presented in our cash flow statement. In January 2023, we raised an additional 12.5 million under this program. And hence, we raised a total of 26.5 million from the beginning of 2022 to today. With this we now have approximately 42 million to 43 million currently available under this ATM program. As of January 31, 2023, we have already made a payment of €10 million towards the purchase price of €15 million for the asset purchase agreement. After making those payments, we had approximately 78 million in liquidity including investment securities at the end of January 31, 2023. We plan to make the remaining payment on the acquisition of 5 million less the deductions in purchase price in the second quarter this year. Based on our current operating plan for 2023 and beyond, we anticipate that we have sufficient cash and liquidity to fund our operations. Looking ahead, we're excited about 2023 as we march forward on our path to 10 million, 15 million in revenue this year from the streams we described. Our core areas of focus, revenue from automotive customers, including MAVIN with perception software, LiDAR sales with non-recurring engineering revenues from OEMs, sales of flash-based LiDAR for non-automotive customers and sale of auto-annotation software for automotive OEM validation work. To summarize, we're really excited about 2023 and beyond. With our milestones and key focus on winning RFQs, we will be proving to the market our value proposition as a unique well-positioned LiDAR company. I would now like to open the line for questions.