Thank you, Alison. Good afternoon, everyone, and thank you all for joining our first quarter 2025 conference call. Last quarter, I said that we expected to be awarded the first of two eFPGA Hard IP contracts for Intel 18A designs within weeks, and the second one very shortly after that. I forecasted the combined value would be mid-seven figures, and if awarded in the expected timeframe, that the revenue would be recognized in Q2. The first of these contracts was awarded a few weeks ago after our last conference call, and on April 28th, we announced that we delivered design-specific eFPGA Hard IP for the customer's Intel 18A test chip. The second contract is with the same customer, but for a different program. The customer has advised us that it has been awarded funding for the program, but funding for the production ASIC, which is a subcomponent of the program, will not be awarded until Q4. Due to this delay, our revenue guidance for Q2 is $4 million. While disappointing, it does not change our full-year outlook for solid revenue growth, non-GAAP profitability, and positive cash flow. Let's take a moment to discuss the test chip program. Given the fact Intel 18A is a new process and incorporates some state-of-the-art features, such as power via back-site power delivery network that we are using in our eFPGA Hard IP we determined having a test chip would be a good investment. To do a test chip on our own would have cost millions of dollars, so we contributed our eFPGA Hard IP license in kind for access to the customer's test chips. These test chips will enable us to fully characterize the power consumption and performance, which enables lead prospective customers to lower their risk assessment of our eFPGA Hard IP on Intel 18A Silicon. As it has turned out, just the delivery of our design-specific eFPGA Hard IP and having a test chip heading into fabrication this summer has given some prospective customers confidence to accelerate their engagements. Our rapid delivery of the design-specific eFPGA Hard IP for the test chip has also brought us closer to this key customer. As a matter of fact, during a high-level meeting with the customer in early May, a third design for a chiplet fabricated using Intel 18A was outlined that we hope to secure later this year. We have invested heavily to gain our unique position as the first available source for eFPGA Hard IP for Intel 18A, and Intel Foundry has acknowledged our work and progress. Last summer, we announced that we joined the Intel Foundry Accelerator IP and USMAG alliances, and we have recently been named a partner in the Intel Foundry Accelerator Chiplet Alliance. As some of you are aware, I was invited by Intel Foundry to present from the main stage at Intel Foundry Direct Connect 2025. This was quite a unique honor in that QuickLogic was one of only four companies to present in the ecosystem spotlight to an audience of more than 1,000 people. The other three were Cadence, eMemory, and Synopsys. Intel Foundry has published a video of the QuickLogic presentation on the Intel YouTube channel. We will post a link to the video in our blog following this call. My presentation was very well received, and the news that QuickLogic has delivered design-specific eFPGA Hard IP for a customer's Intel 18A test chip was recognized as a significant milestone. The excitement and anticipation for Intel 18A was palpable. Intel Foundry confirmed Intel 18A is in risk production with Panther Lake scheduled for mass production by year's end. Intel Foundry also provided a clear roadmap forward from Intel 18A, its strategy to address both USMAG and commercial markets, and its rapidly developing initiatives for advanced packaging and chiplets. In addition to Intel Foundry painting a very optimistic picture about its progress and future outlook, there was increased participation by alliance partners demonstrating IP, EDA, and services for Intel 18A, as there were at Intel Direct Connect 2024. In short, Intel 18A is ready for primetime, and there is significant interest in the unique value proposition our technology enables. Our value proposition is integration, which is what has driven this growth of the semiconductor industry since the invention of the integrated circuit 65 years ago. By using our unique eFPGA Hard IP design engineers can integrate the benefits of a discrete FPGA by embedding it in their ASIC and SoC designs or with a chiplet solution. As it stands today, we are the only company offering eFPGA Hard IP for Intel 18A technology that enables this integration. Pairing a discrete FPGA with an ASIC or SoC is very common in USMAG designs, where the total market for discrete FPGA devices is approximately $1.5 billion. The defense industrial base is intently interested in using Intel 18A for new designs, and their frequent use of FPGA technology bodes very well for our unique position. While capitalizing on this interest is a strong focus, we are also rapidly building momentum in various commercial markets, including several new Intel 18A opportunities. On April 24th, we announced the inclusion of our eFPGA Hard IP in the new Faraday FlashKit 22RRAM SoC development platform. This is the UMC 22 nanometer design win we announced in November of 2023 and have been tracking the progress in our quarterly conference calls. Faraday is a Taiwan-based semiconductor company with a market capitalization of approximately $1.5 billion. Its core business model is to help its customers develop ASIC and SoC designs and then storefront those designs. In the course of its business, Faraday has seen a number of its customers pair a discrete FPGA with the ASIC or SoC that Faraday designs for them. The important point to embrace here is the primary purpose of an ASIC or SoC is to integrate as many discrete chip functions as possible into a single device, and our IP enables that integration to include discrete FPGA devices. To enable its customers to realize the many benefits of FPGA integration, Faraday introduced its new SoC development platform, which includes our eFPGA hard IP. This enables Faraday's customers to easily transition from a two-chip solution, an ASIC or SoC paired with a discrete FPGA, to a single-chip solution of embedded FPGA inside the ASIC or SoC. We believe this platform will generate production eFPGA Hard IP license revenue beginning in the second half of 2025 and royalty revenue in future years. We believe there will be opportunities to expand our involvement with Faraday going forward. Notably, Faraday was one of three companies that was prominently displayed at Intel Direct Connect as a value chain alliance partner. There are four important takeaways from these data. One, Faraday's focus on commercial applications will help accelerate our expansion into new end markets. Two, Faraday's success underscores the industry demand for and value of a storefront business model. Three, our IP enables the integration of discrete FPGAs that are often paired with ASIC and SoC devices. We believe this is a meaningful subset of the $12 billion discrete FPGA market. And four, the Faraday development platform is likely to win many unique customer designs that will generate IP license and royalty revenue for QuickLogic that will scale very favorably. We announced the fourth award of the Strategic Radiation Hardened FPGA government contract valued at approximately $6.6 million last December. Following that, about six weeks ago, we announced an additional $1.4 million incremental funding modification which extends the fourth tranche. We have requested permission to share some details about the expanded scope of this contract with our investors, but so far that permission has not been granted. That said, I can tell you the device we are developing addresses a number of strategic and space applications where total dose and single event radiation hardness is critical, and the designs must include the flexibility only FPGA technology can provide. As a matter of fact, several customers have already expressed interest in using the resulting design via QuickLogic's storefront once it is completed. Now let me take a moment to update our progress on existing contracts that are scheduled to contribute to our eFPGA Hard IP revenue in 2025 and beyond. A number of these contracts have achieved significant milestones during the last several months. These include tape-out and, in several cases, test chips that have been completed and are in validation. This is important because, in some cases, test chip validation will lead to an IP production license and, in a few cases, new eFPGA Hard IP contracts. These are also good illustrations that a long tail of revenue is commonly attached to our eFPGA Hard IP contracts, and following that, a stream of royalties or storefront revenue that can extend for years and, in some cases, more than a decade. Let's start with the IP contracts. Our first contract targeting the Global Foundries’ or GF's 12-LP fabrication node, is with a defense industrial-based customer and includes two cores. We completed our initial deliverables for the first core during Q3 and the second core during Q4 of 2024. In accordance with the forecast I shared last quarter, we had nominal revenue recognition in Q1 and anticipate similar revenue recognition in Q2 in support of the customer's test chip development. Last quarter, we announced an eFPGA Hard IP contract with a new defense industrial-based customer valued at $1.1 million that will also be fabricated on the GF 12LP node. Due to the fact we already had eFPGA Hard IP established for that node, we will recognize revenue and record cash flow in Q2 and Q3 2025. Our first contract for TSMC's 12-nanometer fabrication node is with a large, well-known international company. This design is for a new ultra-low-power SoC targeting a variety of commercial and industrial IoT AI applications. The customer is currently evaluating test chips, and we expect a decision about a second SoC design during Q2. In September 2023, we announced the leading technology company that shows our eFPGA Hard IP for a design that will be fabricated using GF's 22FDX platform. Test chips have been received and are in evaluation. If all goes as planned, we anticipate revenue recognition of a production license during the second half of 2025. The following are IP services contracts that we believe will be supplied via our storefront program. In November 2022, I shared that we taped out a new device for a customer that incorporates our eFPGA Hard IP While we remain in a holding pattern due to a delay with one of the customer subcontractors, we continue to believe we will resume work during the second half of 2025 and that this design has very substantial storefront potential starting in a couple of years. In addition to this initial contract, we have engaged with this customer on multiple new ASIC and chiplet design opportunities that incorporate our eFPGA hard IP. Last quarter, we also announced the award of the first phase of what we expect will be a seven-figure direct-to-storefront eFPGA Hard IP contract with another new defense-industrial-based customer. This application, which enables low-power processing of changing algorithms, is perfectly suited for our eFPGA solution. We completed our deliverables for the first phase of this contract and expect to be awarded the next phase in the second half of 2025. We anticipate design services and IP revenue recognition could begin in Q3 and carry into 2026. Following that, we expect storefront revenue could begin as early as 2027. While some of our existing contracts have good storefront potential that may materialize earlier, this is our first direct-to-storefront contract. Turning now to chiplets, there are two distinctly different chiplet markets. The vertical market is where you see activity today and where we have some chiplet contracts with others pending. In most cases, a single company controls all of the devices in vertical markets. These include processors sold by AMD, Intel, NVIDIA, and others, and end customers that use chiplets in conjunction with an ASIC or SoC. We have done well in the ASIC and SoC markets and believe we will continue to win new contracts for vertical market chiplet designs. The other chiplet market is the commercial off-the-shelf or COTS market. In this market, semiconductor companies will develop and sell chiplets that comply with industry standards as mostly catalog devices. These standards are in development and are forecasted to begin rolling out in 2026. This is the market your chip will address with a variety of devices, including parts that incorporate our eFPGA Hard IP. Companies that want to participate in the COTS market are anxious to develop devices, but most see the risks of doing that ahead of standards as being too high. We are in early discussions with some potential customers regarding a digital proof of concept that would mitigate the risks of a physical design and give them a head start once standards are solidified. Here, we are leveraging the power of our proprietary software tools in an innovative way that we believe will generate revenue ahead of standards, give us a foot in the door, and help our customers get a jump on the market. Our distributors continue to perform very well. During the quarter, we saw an increase in both device and IP engagements, and even though design cycles are generally long, we believe some deals will close in the second half and generate revenue this year. Last quarter, we announced that our board of directors is actively exploring options for SensiML, and there were preliminary discussions regarding the possible sale of this subsidiary or its assets. Due diligence is ongoing, so I can't comment other than saying that our full-year outlook for solid growth and profitability does not include any contributions from SensiML. With that, let me now turn the call over to Elias for a review of the financial results, and I will rejoin for our closing remarks. Elias, please go ahead.