Good afternoon everyone and thank you for joining us today. Before we report on our first quarter 2023 results and business update, I want to share a few thoughts on the state of the lidar industry and Ouster’s strategic positioning. It's clear that market perception of the lidar industry has taken a sharp turn since a number of companies entered the public markets through packs. Companies and investors alike have realized that products can be challenging to manufacture and audit time lines continue to be pushed out. This, coupled with a challenging macroeconomic environment has led to a sharp market correction. Ouster is not immune to these market dynamics, and I share the pain our investors feel. As CEO and co-founder and a large shareholder myself, I did not take this lightly. But I also want to stress that I am immensely confident in the Ouster team, our strategic approach within this competitive space and the opportunity we see to make lidar ubiquitous across a myriad of industries. Ouster is in a strong financial and commercial position with significant cash reserves, accelerating revenues and bookings and then incredible product road maps spanning multiple generations of both scanning and solid-state digital lidar sensors as well as new innovative software products to serve the vast opportunities for lidar technology. Ouster is more capable and competitive than ever. Following our merger with Velodyne, we kicked off a large-scale effort to realign Ouster’s operating model to build a strong business that is both competitive and resilient and puts us on the path to profitability. While we're working through the short-term impacts associated with the integration and our operational realignment, the incredible demand for our industry-leading REV7 sensors gives us confidence that we're gearing up for a strong second half of the year and are well positioned to capitalize on the growth opportunity associated with our differentiated multi-market approach. Ouster achieved strong growth in the first quarter, delivering over $17 million in revenue, including $6.4 million in revenues from Velodyne and booking $33 million in business from new and existing customers. Further, we shipped over 3,000 Ouster OS and Velodyne lidar sensors to customers worldwide. Our new software solutions business for Ouster Gemini and BlueCity drove expanded deals and new customer adoption within the smart infrastructure vertical. Over the course of the first quarter, our team has been intently focused on realigning our cost structure, streamlining manufacturing and delivering on our product road map in order to build a competitive go-forward enterprise. We've identified four strategic priorities for the business in 2023 that we plan to update on each quarter: one, drive new business through targeted sales approach to deliver near-term growth. Two, execute on the Digital lidar road map for OS and DF-Series to expand our serviceable market. Three, develop a robust software ecosystem to accelerate lidar adoption, and four, build a financially strong business to support our long-term growth and deliver value to shareholders. We expanded sales of our new REV7 sensors powered by our next-generation L3 chip, shipping sensors to over 110 customers in the first quarter of 2023, including warehouse automation customers, like Vecna Robotics, Cyngn and Paleo as well as a number of large industrial trucking, bus and mining equipment OEMs. I am also excited to report that earlier today, we announced that Ouster was awarded a production win to be the exclusive supplier of long-range lidar promotional all-electric IONIQ 5 -based robotaxis. The serial production agreement will see Ouster Supply Motional with our VLS-128 sensors through 2026. Motional is a leading AV company with large-scale deployments and strong commercial partnerships, and I'm thrilled to partner with them. I see digital lidar as the end of state technology for lidar, an approach that continues to be reinforced by broad commercial traction and direct customer feedback. By reducing the components of an analog system and integrating that complexity onto a powerful custom silicon chip that tracks with Moore's Law, we can continue to drive significant performance gains with each chip tape-out without redesigning our products from the ground up. This also allows us to leverage economies of scale across our digital products and to quickly scale up manufacturing given our simplified architecture, while simultaneously marching down the cost curve faster than our analog peers. Our REV7 OS sensor suite powered by the L3 chip, improved our overall competitiveness across markets and doubled our collective serviceable obtainable market or SOM, cementing our position as an industry leader for high-performance lidar. With REV7 sales, production and shipments now ramping, our engineering team is working on the next-generation custom silicon to power our OS sensors, the L4 chip, which is expected to tape out later this year. This is the power of digital lidar, continuous improvements that support new and existing customers across ever-expanding use cases and end markets. I look forward to providing the market with more information on our OS sensor roadmap as we move through the rest of the year. We are also on track to deliver early B samples of our solid-state digital flash or DF sensors, which are expected to be sampled by automotive customers for the first time in the second half of this year. These early B samples represent the final form factor for our DF sensors for high-volume series production automotive programs. This is a critical milestone on our automotive roadmap and in our commercial engagements with automakers, including our strategic OEM partner. We will mature our B samples over time by replacing our current silicon chip, Godzilla, with our next-generation silicon, the Chronos chip. With Godzilla, our DF sensor is already operational today, producing rich point cloud data at long range and high resolution. The state-of-the-art Chronos chip will take our DF sensors to the next level, targeting improved performance across the board, including resolution, power efficiency, memory, dynamic range and detection accuracy. As the backbone of Ouster’s DF Series, the Chronos chip is designed to meet ASIL-B, automotive functional safety requirements according to ISO 26262 and AEC-Q100 automotive qualifications. We intend to tape out the Chronos chip later this year and to integrate the chip into the first sample units early next year. I cannot wait to demonstrate the performance, cost and flexibility advantage of the DF product line in the second half of this year. Turning to our new solutions business built on our software offerings, Ouster Gemini and BlueCity, we're seeing a fantastic customer response to the combination of our digital lidar hardware, including the OSDome combined with our new software solutions. As part of our plans to unify our software solutions for the smart infrastructure vertical, BlueCity will be underpinned by Ouster Gemini to add OS sensor compatibility, more features and better overall performance to BlueCity customers. We currently have hundreds of active smart infrastructure deployments around the world for intelligent transportation systems, crowd and retail analytics and security monitoring. Each of these deployments presents an opportunity for our software, and we are also partnering with new system integrators to accelerate the deployment of our products into these markets. Ouster lidar will be included in six of the smart grant program deployments that we were awarded earlier this year as part of the funding provided within the US infrastructure bill. With millions of signalized intersections around the world and the global market for end system security cameras already estimated at $32 billion, there is a multibillion dollar market opportunity for lidar and smart infrastructure that Ouster is poised to capture. Capturing a large and growing market for lidar requires more than high-performance competitive products. It requires a financially strong business that can support our long-term growth and deliver value to stockholders. Starting with immediate initiatives to support the ongoing integration, we are now targeting annualized merger cost synergies of $80 million to $85 million. These cost savings, including already $50 million on an annualized basis in the first quarter of 2023, combined with strong bookings and rebounded quarter-on-quarter average selling prices, position us well on a go-forward basis. We continue to identify new synergies and look forward to providing the market with a thoughtful and credible business model, following integration later this year. As part of Ouster’s outsourced manufacturing strategy, we completed the transition of the VLP-16 sensors to Fabrinet in Thailand in the first quarter. We're also on track to fully transition the VLP-32 by the end of the second quarter and VLS-128 by the end of this year. In addition to our ongoing efforts to strengthen the overall business and catalyze new growth, Ouster is also taking steps to enforce its intellectual property and ensure fair competition in the market. In April, we filed the patent infringement complaint with the US International Trade Commission against the Chinese lidar maker, Hesai. We also filed the patent infringement complaint against Hesai in the US District Court for the District of Delaware, seeking an injunction and monetary damages. Hesai had multiple patent infringement claims filed against it, while Ouster holds one of the largest patent families in the latter industry and has successfully enforced and defended its patent portfolio previously. We intend to vigorously enforce our patents until the infringing products are barred. And with that, I'll turn it over to our CFO, Mark Weinswig, to provide more context on our financial results for the first quarter and outlook for the second quarter as well as provide further details on our near-term integration progress.