Thanks, Jason. As we turn to page 11, let's review our Application Software segment. Revenue for the year grew by 16% in total, organic revenue grew by 5%. EBITDA margins were 42.5% and core margins improved 80 basis points in the year. For the segment, we saw recurring and recurring revenue grow on an organic basis 7% for the year and total organic revenue improved about 70 basis points save for the Deltek related market weakness. Both of which provide evidence of underlying strength for the businesses in this group. Aderant continues to execute from a position of strength. FY 2025 revenue grew in the mid-teens area with strong bookings throughout the year. Importantly, they're leaning into the right long-term work, accelerating SaaS and AI-led innovation while modernizing their tech platform and data lake. Deltek was the primary weaker part of the story for this segment and has been straightforward all year, with GovCon remaining a challenging market throughout most of 2025. That said, we view the passage of the O triple B as a positive development for the market. It should drive upside over time, but we've not included any benefit in our 2026 guidance, and we'll monitor customer activity as the year progresses. Vertafore has another solid year with growth driven by strong recurring revenue performance and continued execution on product and customer outcomes. Looking ahead, the team is leaning into a focused set of priorities. Scaling automation, particularly AI-enabled workflow improvements, while continuing to deliver steady innovation to the agency and carrier ecosystem. PowerPlan delivered another strong year with healthy recurring growth and steady progress on product modernization and cloud migration. They continue to invest in product innovation, customer experience, and internal operating capabilities improving their long-term organic growth profile. Shout out to Raffi for carrying the leadership mantle forward at PowerPlan and great job managing the transition from Joe. Illumia, formerly known as Seaboard and Transact, continues to execute well and is progressing in its integration and platform roadmap while maintaining solid commercial momentum. And we're excited to welcome Greg Brown, our new CEO at Illumia, brings a long and successful history of leading scaled software businesses. Congrats and thanks to Laura, Rachel, Taran, and Rob for executing the VCP driving the business combination and achieving the year one target. We look at the broader portfolio of businesses we've acquired over the last couple of years: Centellus, Transact, SubSplash, Central Reach, and ProCare, feel very good about the quality and long-term growth potential of this group. However, ProCare did not perform to our expectations in 2025, although we do feel good about the business building that occurred last year. Specifically, we improved payments execution, upgraded the entire leadership team, and continued to win competitively in the market where ProCare remains a category leader. The biggest constraint was implementation timing across both software and payments which delayed customer time to value and weighed on payments volumes. Improving implementation speed and delighting the customer base are the top priorities. ProCare's leader Joe Gomes has executed this playbook before at PowerPlan. Central Reach is off to an outstanding start and ahead of our deal model. The business is scaling well with strong recurring software momentum and expanding profitability, they're building a broader growth engine through cross-sell and steady cadence of new product releases, including AI-enabled offerings. Now turning to our outlook for 2026. We expect organic growth to be in the higher end of the mid-singles range. We also expect a modest back-half weighting as Central Reach turns organic and non-recurring comparables ease in the second half. As mentioned previously, maintaining a conservative posture in GovCon at Deltek until we've seen sustained improvement in commercial activity. So overall, application software remains a durable growth engine, supported by recurring revenue momentum and continued product execution across this portfolio. Please turn with us to page 12. Total revenue growth in our Network segment was 8%, organic revenue grew 4% for 2025. EBITDA margins came in at 54.1%. DAT continues to execute well on what they can control. Broker integrations, value capture, and trust in network, leading to ARPU expansion. Although the freight recession persisted throughout 2025, DAT is continuing its evolution from a traditional load board into a more automated market where brokers and carriers can match loads with greater trust efficiency and increasingly transact with the platform. And as this happens, DAT's TAM and monetization opportunities grow. To this end, DAT is advancing its AI-first operating model with concrete use cases across carrier onboarding, fraud detection, freight matching automation. This is a pattern we like, AI then improves customer outcomes, lowers transaction friction, expands our TAM, where you have a very high rate to win. ConstructConnect had another strong year of recurring revenue growth and the team made material technical advances with their AI-based takeoff solution Boost. Foundry is making steady progress with year-over-year growth in ARR as the market continues to recover. We continue to be excited about the AI product development at Foundry because it fits naturally in the creative workflows small improvements can materially improve artist throughput. Importantly, these are high-frequency, high-value tasks that Foundry already sits inside. AI is being delivered as embedded features that customers should adopt quickly given the clear and integrated efficiency gains offered. MHA, SoftWriter's SHP continued to execute well supported by stable end market demand and strong reoccurring revenue models. Each team is advancing its roadmap with targeted investments in functionality, workflow efficiency, and service levels to deepen customer value and retention. SunSplash is off to a great start in the portfolio with strong execution and solid momentum across the business. We're encouraged by the durability of the revenue model and the opportunity to continue expanding value delivered to customers over time. As we turn to the outlook for the year, we expect network software organic growth to be in the higher end of the mid-singles range, representing a modest improvement versus 2025. We expect a stronger Q4 driven by Subsplash turning organic in the quarter. Of note, remain conservative on DAT by assuming no meaningful improvement in the freight market. Now please turn to page 13 and let's review our TEP segment's full-year results. Revenue here grew 7% on a total and 6% on an organic basis. EBITDA margins remained strong at 35.7%. We'll start with NDI whose growth is being driven primarily by sustained momentum in its electromagnetic tracking solutions supported by strong OEM demand and program ramps. Importantly, OEM order activity has remained strong and the business is converting that demand into higher revenue scale and operating leverage. Great job by Dave and the entire team at NDI. Verathon continues to perform very well with solid growth across its GlideScope and BFlex franchises. Importantly, Verathon is the US market share leader in single-use bronchoscopes, reflects several years of consistent execution and reinforces the durability of a model as the business continues to take share in an attractive procedural workflow area. Looking to 2026, we're optimistic about several new product launches planned throughout the year. For the full year, Neptune grew modestly notwithstanding the year-long backlog normalization supported by demand for its static ultrasonic meters and its cloud-based software solutions. Although the second-half commercial challenges tied to our tariff surge program eased late in the year, we remain cautious and are not underwriting a recovery in our 2026 guidance. Finally, the balance of the businesses in this segment, Civco, FMI, Innovonix, IPA, and RF Ideas, performed really strong throughout 2025 and are meaningful contributors to the segment's results. For the full year, we expect segment organic growth in the mid-single-digit range with the first half being more in the low singles area as Neptune's backlog continues to normalize. Given the more limited visibility at Neptune, we're taking a cautious approach as we monitor underlying demand over the next couple of quarters. With that, please turn us to Page 15. So now let's turn to our Q1 and full-year 2026 guidance. Based on what we previously discussed in our segment overviews, we're initiating our 2026 financial guidance to grow full-year revenue in the 8% area, organic revenue growth between 5-6%, and adjusted DEPS of $21.3 to $21.55. Our guide assumes a full-year effective tax rate in the 21% area and more in the 22% area for Q1. To reiterate from earlier, our full-year guidance does not bake in improvement at Deltek's GovCon business or in DAT's freight market and assumes modest top-line weakness at Neptune versus 2025. As discussed, we expect stronger second-half organic growth driven largely by Central Reach and SubSplash turning organic and easing non-recurring comparables. Our guidance does not assume a meaningful revenue uplift from our AI development work either. We view AI as incremental upside as we scale commercialization across the portfolio. Finally, we remain positioned to be active and opportunistic on capital deployment. We continue to have a robust M&A funnel, a meaningful remaining share repurchase authorization, and substantial financial flexibility, and we'll remain disciplined and unbiased between M&A and buybacks based on what drives the highest and most durable cash flow per share compounding. For the first quarter, we expect adjusted DEPS to be in the range of $4.95 to $5 reflecting the dynamics previously discussed. Now please turn us to page 16 and let's open up for your questions. We'll conclude with the same three takeaways with which we started. First, in 2025, we delivered both double-digit revenue and EBITDA growth and solid free cash flow. Enterprise software bookings grew in the low double-digit range, which positions us well entering 2026. Second, we're investing for long-term sustainable growth improvements while staying disciplined in our expectations. Throughout 2025, we upskilled talent, sharpened strategy, and improved execution across the portfolio and we are accelerating AI product development. We're not baking in an organic inflection in 2026 and our guidance will reflect improvement as it materializes. Third, we materially advanced our portfolio through capital deployment. We deployed $3.3 billion into high-quality vertical software acquisitions, executed opportunistic repurchases, and maintained more than $6 billion of forward capacity. As we look ahead, Roper remains an advantage and preferred buyer for both management teams and private equity sellers and believe the M&A backdrop remains constructive as private equity firms face increasing pressure to generate liquidity for limited partners. Our pipeline is robust and our team is deeply engaged. We will remain disciplined and unbiased on valuation, and business quality. In parallel, we'll continue to balance acquisitions with opportunistic buybacks, allocating capital to whichever path drives the best risk-adjusted and long-term cash flow per share compounding. As we turn to your questions, please flip to the final slide strategic compounding flywheel. What we do at Roper is simple. We compound cash flow over a long arc of time with a disciplined strategy anchored on three things. First, we own market-leading vertical-focused businesses: application-specific, deeply embedded, and mission-critical. These are durable franchises with highly recurring revenue and organic cash flow growth that can improve over time. Second, we're running a decentralized operating model so our teams stay exceptionally close to customers and their workflows, so we can consistently compete and win. That customer intimacy is a core competitive advantage. It's also how we win in AI. In our markets, AI isn't a generic overlay. It has to be grounded in a real workflow context, tuned to domain-specific use cases, and deployed through trusted embedded relationships. So our AI delivers measurable value and better customer results. Third, we pair that with disciplined, centrally-led capital deployment. Focused on high-quality M&A and opportunistic share repurchases. Allocating capital objectively to maximize durable cash flow per share compounding. Niche leading businesses, decentralized operations close to customers, and disciplined capital deployment. That's our long-term compounding flywheel. We're excited to compete and win and continue delivering long-term and improving cash flow compounding per share. So with that, thank you for your continued interest and support. Let's open it up to your questions.