Thank you, Andy. And thank you all for joining the call. Second quarter revenue set a new record, with record systems revenue more-than-offsetting weaker-than-anticipated endpoint IC revenue. The primary driver of the systems revenue strength was the loss-prevention deployment at the visionary European retailer. The primary driver of the endpoint IC weakness was larger-than-anticipated retail apparel inventory destocking. We expect the impacts of that inventory destocking to persist at least through the third quarter. Focusing first on endpoint ICs, second quarter revenue declined sequentially, coming in slightly below our expectations. The magnitude of the retail inventory destocking became apparent late in the quarter, not just to us but also to our inlay partners, some of whom had requested upside ICs as recently as April. That destocking more than offset sequential IC growth at our second large North American supply chain and logistics enterprise customer and us seeding several hundred million Impinj M775 ICs into multiple authentication applications. Looking to the third quarter, our endpoint IC share at our enterprise customers remains strong. At the same time, we and our inlay partners now anticipate softer-than-expected third-quarter retail demand recovery. Those partners built IC safety stock anticipating a stronger recovery, and as our wafer supply has grown, they are burning down roughly a month’s worth of ICs, primarily in the third quarter but with a tail into the fourth. Also, the curve of new-program launches, shifted to the right by the 2022 product shortfalls, created an adoption air pocket that the industry is still working through. Our enterprise wins are insufficient to overcome these headwinds and, as a result, our third-quarter endpoint IC revenue will decline sequentially. Importantly, despite these headwinds, we do not know of a single end user who has pulled back from RAIN RFID. Said another way, our long-term opportunity remains strong, and we expect growing adoption to drive demand after these corrections are behind us. We also expect greater than 25% 2023 endpoint IC unit-volume growth. Turning to systems, second-quarter reader and gateway revenue exceeded our expectations, driven by better-than-anticipated component availability. The additional supply allowed us to deliver more gateways into the visionary European retailer’s self-checkout and loss-prevention deployment than we had expected, as well as fulfill our prior-period reader backlog. It also allows our team to shift their focus to new opportunities for our solutions offerings. Regardless, for the third quarter, we expect a sequential decline in reader and gateway revenue due to delivery timing to the visionary European retailer and our return to typical reader and gateway backlog entering the quarter, the latter after nearly two years of component supply constraints. Our second-quarter reader IC revenue remained healthy, with robust demand for printer-encoders in North America offsetting weak macro demand in China. Looking to third quarter, we see the printer-encoder demand mostly fulfilled while China remains soft. Our Chinese reader partners built Indy reader IC inventory ahead of our planned end-of-life, and are today focused on selling Indy-based product inventory rather than ramping Impinj E-family-based designs. That Indy focus will drive a sequential decline in third-quarter reader IC revenue. Like for readers and gateways, our reader IC supply has normalized and we enter the third quarter with typical reader IC backlog. Turning to new products, last week we launched the Impinj M800 series RAIN RFID endpoint ICs. The first ICs in the series, the Impinj M830 and M850, are the most advanced in the market, with performance and features designed to help enterprises read the right tag, at the right place, at the right time. In addition to 25% more die per wafer than the Impinj M700, the M800 has 30% lower power consumption, allowing businesses to use a single, small tag across a broad range of items. With enhanced tag reliability, manufacturability and drop-in compatibility with M700 antennas, we expect the M800 to drive additional RAIN adoption. It is also a key component of our long-term growth and margin targets. Turning to intellectual property, we are the innovation leader in our industry, with more than 300 issued and allowed patents. I am pleased to say we successfully defended our leadership position by prevailing in two separate trials. In June, a federal jury in Washington found that Impinj endpoint ICs do not infringe an NXP patent. In July, a federal jury in California found that NXP endpoint ICs do infringe two Impinj patents, one willfully. The California jury awarded Impinj approximately $18.9 million in damages and lost profits, and we have asked the court for injunctive relief. We now turn our attention to the upcoming Texas trials against NXP. In closing, from today’s vantage point we see several headwinds driving lower third-quarter revenue. At the same time, our long-term opportunity remains strong, and we see some green shoots in retail apparel. We as a company have been through industry cycles before, and have come through those cycles stronger. With confidence in our growing opportunity and our leading position in it, I have no doubt we will do so again. Before I turn the call over to Cary for our financial review and third quarter outlook, I’d like to again thank every member of the Impinj team for your constant effort driving our bold vision. I feel honored by my incredible good fortune to work with you. Cary?