Thank you, Frank, for those kind words. I am looking forward to retirement and spending more time with my family and some favorite projects. Although I'm leaving, I'm confident in the company's continued success. The CFO role in any company is a challenging position. In our case, I believe we have met that challenge with the strong support of an excellent finance organization. Eric, our Corporate Controller, who will assume the role of Interim CFO, as one of our Treasurer and both their staffs and our international CFOs and their staffs. The Photronics Board is demanding and supportive and the cohesiveness and commitment of the leadership team to a well-defined strategy of targeted investment and consistent execution will help ensure that success. Now turning to first quarter results. Revenue was $216.3 million up 2% year-over-year and 5% less than last quarter. As Frank mentioned, our first quarter began slowly, but gained momentum as end market demand seem to recover. The first quarter is typically the seasonally slowest quarter in our fiscal year. Slower demand at the beginning of the first quarter exacerbated the seasonal decrease and there were four fewer days than the previous quarter, all combining for the sequential decrease. First quarter IC revenue was $157.6 million, up 1% year-over-year and 4% lower sequentially. High-end revenue increase led by strong foundry logic demand in Asia and high-end revenue in the US. Mainstream revenue was lower due to softness in Asia, in part related to the stronger high-end demand resulting from customers' migration to the more advanced nodes. The long-term growth drivers remain intact as we support customers' technology road maps and investments as they expand capacity to support supply chain regionalization. FPD revenue of $58.7 million improved 8% compared with last year and was down 7% from Q4's record level. High-end FPD revenue improved year-over-year on an increase in demand for AMOLED displays used in mobile applications, although it was lower sequentially on normal seasonal softness. The mainstream FPD decline was attributable to the slow start to Q1 we alluded to before. We remain the technology leader, which gives us confidence in our ability to continue to outgrow the market as panel makers release innovative products to gain market share. Gross margin was 36.6%, slightly higher year-over-year and slightly lower quarter-over-quarter, consistent with changes in revenue and the effect of high operating leverage in both directions. Operating expenses were higher this quarter primarily related to higher employee compensation expense. The resulting operating margin was 26.6%. Net income in the quarter was $26.2 million or $0.42 per diluted share. Adjusted for the nonoperating loss, net income was $29.9 million or $0.48 per diluted share, an improvement from last year and somewhat lower than our very strong Q4 earnings. We generated $41.5 million in operating cash flow, 50% higher than last year due to higher net income and effective working capital management. Our CapEx investments for growth were $43.3 million in the quarter. Our CapEx guidance for the year will remain at $140 million, primarily in both high-end and mainstream IC to address anticipated demand. We ended the quarter with a cash balance of $508.5 million, short-term investments of $13 million and debt of $23.4 million providing us with ample liquidity to fund investments in organic growth. Before I provide guidance, I'll remind you that our visibility is always limited as our backlog is typically only one to three weeks and demand for some of our products is inherently uneven and difficult to predict. Additionally, the ASPs for high-end mask sets are high. And as this segment of the business grows, a relatively low number of high-end orders can have a significant impact on our quarterly revenue and earnings. Given those caveats, we expect second quarter revenue to be in the range of $226 million to $236 million. We believe the momentum that built during the first quarter will continue into Q2 driven by solid long-term demand drivers across our markets. Our pricing environment has stabilized around the mid-30s -- mid to high 30s percentage gross margin level. And at the midpoint of our guidance for Q2, we anticipated gross margin in the 38% range somewhat better than the margin in Q1. Based on those revenue expectations and our current operating model, we estimate non-GAAP earnings per share for the second quarter to be in the range of $0.50 to $0.58 per diluted share. After a slow start to the year, we're encouraged by strengthening demand during the quarter and into second quarter. We anticipate the continuation of these trends, along with the performance of our global team to provide sequential improvement in the second quarter and continued growth through 2024. I will now turn the call over to the operator for your questions.