Thank you, Andy. And thank you all for joining the call. Our first quarter set a strong start to the year. Revenue hit a new quarterly record. Our multi-quarter endpoint IC backlog, underpinned by our solutions engagements with enterprise end users, is very strong. And our wafer supply is finally improving, allowing us to use our balance sheet to begin building inventory to support that backlog as well as anticipated future growth. Starting with endpoint ICs, first quarter revenue exceeded our expectations, setting a record for the 7th [ph] consecutive quarter. That performance was driven by underlying demand, increasing IC supply and our inlay partners rebuilding their safety stock. Coming off that strong first quarter, we see several crosscurrents that should drive second quarter endpoint IC revenue to be flat sequentially. First, enterprise program expansions and new use cases, the latter built significantly on our solutions efforts, are the main drivers of our endpoint IC growth. From today’s vantage point, even though every meaningful enterprise deployment with which we are involved is progressing, each is also delayed relative to our expectations by several months, all for their own reasons but most traceable back to prior supply disruptions and our inability to predict the precise timing and pace of large deployments. Second, product shortfalls stalled many early opportunities and restarting those opportunities will take time. And finally, as our IC supply recovers, we see our inlay partners slowing their safety-stock growth. In summary, our demand remains healthy, our backlog remains very strong and we expect robust full-year endpoint IC growth but see a second quarter pause. Beginning with those enterprise deployments, we received a PO for the third phase of the loss-prevention deployment at the visionary European retailer. This phase is roughly 75% the size of the prior phase, starts in second quarter, spans several quarters and will drive incremental endpoint IC volumes. We continue to be excited by the self-checkout and loss prevention use case and see expansion opportunities at this retailer and at others. In retail general merchandise, we expect strong second half 2023 endpoint IC demand growth from category expansion at the large North American retailer. And on the supply chain and logistics front, we see very strong partner demand for our reader ICs, used in printer-encoders, for our second large North American end user. We expect that end user to drive large endpoint IC volumes in second half 2023 and beyond. Turning to the early opportunities, I am pleased by our progress with Impinj Authenticity and expect meaningful second quarter Impinj M775 endpoint IC volumes for tax tracking as well as healthcare and specialty foods. I am also excited about book and magazine tracking in Japan, a use case we pioneered years ago, that we expect will consume several hundred million endpoint ICs in 2023. We are well positioned to capitalize on these early opportunities. On the supply front, wafer availability will finally catch up to demand in the second quarter. Between support from our foundry partner and our post-processing investments, we look to avoid a repeat of our painful 2021 and 2022 shortfalls by building appropriate inventory. For readers, we entered the second quarter with significant backlog, but stubborn tightness in a few components means we will likely carry significant reader backlog into third quarter. For reader ICs, demand for our legacy Indy products was strong, even as our partners began ramping 65 announced E-family-based products to production, with more than 75 new products in development. Turning to our organization, in April we acquired Voyantic, the industry leader in solutions for inlay design, measurement and test. With leading end users relying on our platform to transform their operations, this acquisition expands our solutions footprint to advance the quality, reliability and readability of the partner inlays used in those enterprise deployments. Perhaps most important to a successful integration, the cultural fit between the two teams is very strong. I have worked closely with and trusted the Voyantic leadership for the better part of 15 years and am thrilled to have them, and the very experienced Voyantic team, as part of the Impinj family. I am also thrilled to welcome Miron Washington to Impinj’s board. Miron has 25 years’ experience in business-to-consumer and business-to-business e-commerce, global supply chain operations, digital transformation and multi-billion-dollar P&L ownership. His knowledge and experience in our target market verticals will pay dividends on our journey to connect every item in our everyday world. Miron, welcome to the Impinj family! Before I close, I’d like to thank every member of the Impinj team for your unflagging effort on so many fronts, from new product development to scaling our operational capabilities to delighting our many customers. I feel honored by my incredible good fortune to work with you. In closing, from today’s vantage point I see first half 2023 as a transition from product shortfalls and project delays to timely shipments against growing opportunities. Looking to second half 2023, I see secular market growth, strong Impinj backlog and our platform solutions efforts paying dividends. As we continue driving our bold vision, I remain confident in our market position and energized by the opportunities ahead. I will now turn the call over to Cary for our financial review and second quarter outlook. Cary?