Thank you, Angus, and good afternoon, everyone. The second quarter marked continued commercial traction and strong ASPs of our REV7 product family as well as significant progress towards completing our merger integration efforts and realigning Ouster's business model with our expected growth trajectory. Starting off with our second quarter 2023 results, we recognized a record $19 million in revenue, a 13% increase over the first quarter. Industrial and robotics customers continued to drive the majority of our revenue in the second quarter, accounting for approximately 56% of sales closely followed by sales in the smart infrastructure vertical. In the second quarter, we booked $43 million in business with new and existing customers, up from $33 million in the first quarter 2023. This represents a book-to-bill ratio of over 2% in the second quarter. In the first half of this year, we have already booked a combined $76 million in business, up from a total of $70 million in the fiscal year 2022. Similar to the first quarter, we saw continued commercial traction driven by strong demand and improved average selling prices for our REV7 sensors. In total, we shipped over 3,000 sensors in the second quarter. Our ASPs increased to 6,300 from 5,700 per sensor in the first quarter, primarily due to the strength of REV7 and a positive mix shift within the VLP product category. We believe Ouster is in a strong position as we move through the remainder of 2023. We have the most performant family of sensors on the market, one of the broadest customer bases in the industry and a strong balance sheet with $224 million in cash, cash equivalents and short-term investments as of June 30. As anticipated, Ouster saw slightly improved GAAP gross margins in the second quarter. The second quarter gross margins of 1% included certain expenses outside of our ordinary operations, including excess and obsolete costs, and losses on firm purchase comments of $3.8 million associated with the consolidation of product lines and manufacturing transition to the REV7 OS sensors. Ouster's non-GAAP gross margins were 26% in the second quarter of 2023. Given the transient nature of integration-related activity, we will continue to breakout merger integration, product transition and other expenses outside of our ordinary operations in an effort to provide a clear delineation between infrequent or unusual impacts in the fundamentals of the business to help baseline future operating performance. In an effort to meet customer demand, reduce costs and ultimately expand long-term gross margins, we made further progress in our efforts to transition all Velodyne sensor production line to a contract manufacturer in Thailand. We have completed the full transition of the VLP-32 sensor following the full transition of the VLP-16 in the first quarter, and we remain on track to transition the VLS-128 by the end of the year. As a result of these efforts, we expect to see improved gross margins in the second half of 2023 as these activities are completed and the savings begin to be realized. Turning to our cost reduction efforts. We took additional actions in the second quarter to reduce our cash burn rate and align our cost structure with a path to profitability. Building off the actions already taken in the first quarter, the company reduced annual run rate costs by an additional $40 million in the second quarter of 2023. We implemented further cost reductions across the organization, which resulted in a one-time cash expense of over $3 million. With these cuts, we are now on track to exceed our previously announced cost savings target of $80 million to $85 million, increasing our estimate to over $110 million in annualized cost savings exiting the fourth quarter of 2023 as baselined against the stand-alone cost structure of Ouster and Velodyne as of the third quarter of 2022. During our third quarter earnings call, we expect to present a long-term plan for the business as well as greater detail on our combined company cost structure on a go-forward basis. The actions we have taken have been difficult. We believe they put us in a great position to improve our financial results, providing us with strong operating leverage as we grow the business. We are working to position Ouster for long-term success and are taking the necessary steps to grow top line revenues while also containing costs and improving margins. Now turning to guidance. For the third quarter of 2023, Ouster is targeting between $20 million and $22 million in revenues. We are pleased that our growth rate over the past couple of quarters, driven by the strong bookings activities and key design wins. We expect to see continued progression on our gross margins over the next two quarters as we complete the merger integration work, outsourced manufacturing of Velodyne Lidar sensors and migrate more of the business to our more performant REV7 sensors. As we continue to make progress on these activities, we do expect our GAAP gross margins and non-GAAP gross margins to start to converge in the second half of the year. Overall, the second quarter performance saw a number of financial improvements over the first quarter, including higher bookings and revenues, a strong book-to-bill, higher gross margins, lower operating expenses and an improved adjusted EBITDA. And with that, I would like to turn the call back over to Angus.