Thanks, Matt. I also want to thank the analysts and shareholders who have continued to support Phunware despite what feels like one market catastrophe after another, from the pandemic, to the war in Ukraine, to inflation and possible recession, we’ve weathered the storm. Of course, Roosevelt did warn, a smooth sea never made a skilled sailor. I assure you we are skilled, resolved and charting the right course. As I mentioned last November, I intend to focus my comments around five core objectives. First, improving the features and scalability of Phunware to not only drive adoption and shorten our sales cycle, but also enhance our margin profile. What excites me most is we now have notable reference customers in three of the largest markets where our solution can solve the biggest pain points, healthcare, hospitality and the workplace. Digital transformation in healthcare alone is a $0.5 trillion market, with the largest driver being eHealth due to its ability to increase patient satisfaction and reduce operational costs. While our feature-rich Digital Front Door is an industry leader, scalability will rely on our ability to measure and justify a more definitive return on investment. To address this head on, we’ve engaged an expert third-party to help analyze and define the financial impact of our Digital Front Door, as well as our LBS solution. We expect to begin sharing the results of this study by the end of Q2. While the global market for Smart Hospitality is projected to reach $60 billion by 2028, it’s growing at nearly double the rate of healthcare and we’re seeing analogous interest across our pipeline. As Russ highlighted earlier, our Smart Hospitality Solution at Atlantis, Bahamas generated over $1.2 million in 2022, but over half of that was prior to guest arrival. Guests were downloading the app, exploring all 140 acres of Paradise Island, planning their experiences and spending money all from the comfort of home. This kind of success is how we sold Gaylord Hotels by Marriott. In six months, we’ve deployed our Smart Hospitality Solution across the entire Gaylord Hotels portfolio, which at over 12 million square feet represents five of the top 10 largest non-gaming convention center hotels in the United States. However, what I’m most proud of with this deployment is that it required no new code, which is a testament to our engineers and the investment we made in our platform during the pandemic. Going forward, this will greatly improve our margin profile, as well as help us scale more strategic accounts. I’m also thrilled to announce we have begun rolling out a configurable LBS solution to specifically target convention centers. This dynamic mapping and wayfinding capability will help attend these route to the right exhibits, while organizers can message attendees based on proximity or persona. Organizers and venues can seamlessly reconfigure convention center space and our routes will adjust to account for any new layouts without additional hardware or fingerprinting. Lastly, on the product front, we recently announced the availability of our Experience Optimizer. This feature enables a single mobile application to autonomously deliver any number of experiences by seamlessly configuring and launching a unique JavaScript object notation that contains specific information on layout, features, themes, content, integrations and maps. Although each experience is launched from a single mobile application, every experience can load in function like its own native mobile application based on building persona or even sub-brand. Of course, no amount of features will matter if we don’t solve for our second core objective of scaling revenue, as well as activating indirect channels by ensuring our partners have the training, collateral and proper incentive structures in place to be successful. We recently executed partner agreements with Diversified, Ingram Micro and Siemens that are considerably more coordinated and directive than past relationships. For example, Ingram Micro has already committed to upwards of five qualified leads per quarter, while Diversified hosted company-wide training on Phunware for all of its representatives this month. We believe this kind of channel partner buy-in and engagement will be critical to scaling revenue this year. However, given the nature of the healthcare and hospitality industry in particular, some of our customers may ultimately represent our most important channels. To that end, we are in the process of deploying another Marriott property, Wailea Beach Resort in Maui, but that new customer has led to strategic discussions with Marriott about how to more effectively partner going forward. To support these sales efforts and with the help of a third-party expert, we are in the process of auditing our entire sales process along with associated collateral. Expect to see tighter language around our fundamental value propositions with objective ROI justification to help us not only prospect, but also shorten our sales cycle. Another important change we’ve made to shorten our sales cycle is streamlining our contracts and pricing. Our new approach to selling is an all-in methodology that accounts for software licenses, hardware, professional services and support at one easy-to-understand price per year. Despite this purposeful focus on our SaaS solutions, we remain committed to our third core objective of launching a compliant blockchain ecosystem that better incentivizes and authenticates consumer engagement. We don’t believe blockchain is a pivot or a distraction, but rather a natural extension of our SaaS offerings that seeks to re-imagine how brands engage with consumers. Imagine a resort rewarding you for following a treasure hunt to exciting new amenities just as easily as the hospital rewarding you for showing up on time. As Russ already highlighted, we have made significant advances to PhunWallet that will help us better integrate this kind of functionality and generate revenue, while offering consumers additional opportunities to engage and earn PhunToken. In parallel, we are excited to announce that we are working closely with Securitize to target the first half of this year for an initial issuance of approximately 25% of PhunCoin’s maximum supply with regulated trading to follow shortly thereafter. We also remain committed to our fourth core objective of ramping sales and improving margins of Lyte by streamlining operations and being more disciplined with our marketing efforts. By targeting a cost-per-acquisition of $120 and a cost-per-build of $20, we are confident in our ability to not only drive Lyte to breakeven, but also position the business to scale profitably. In Q2, we also plan to launch new lines, such as, workstations to increase the size of our serviceable market and take advantage of our growing brand awareness. Last but certainly not least, the ongoing transition to Russ’s leadership has furthered our fifth core objective to engage more investors with a focus on institutions to drive awareness, volume and stronger price appreciation. We will continue to work closely with Gateway, ROTH Capital and H.C. Wainwright to attend conferences and participate in non-deal roadshows to share the Phunware story more broadly. We have also been given great opportunity to engage new shareholders through partnerships with industry luminaries like Jon Najarian and Marc LoPresti, Moneta Advisors. In closing, I want to personally thank all 106 of Phunware’s employees and reiterate our 10 operational goals this year, foster teamwork and minimize distractions, be more disciplined in the allocation of resources, align resources with core competencies, focus on ideal customers and partners, update positioning and marketing to better sell our core value proposition, productize internal tools, identify inorganic targets to accelerate commercialization of key capabilities, launch PhunCoin, reduce cash burn and minimize dilution. For closing remarks, I’d like to turn things back over to Russ.