Thank you, Patrick. And hello, everyone. At the outset, I'd like to dig a little deeper into the point Patrick was making about our business, establishing a new baseline. As our Q1 results show, the pandemic did not create a high watermark for Sonos. Instead, the pandemic strengthened the underlying fundamentals of our business, and we have great confidence that we will be able to continue to grow from the new level that we have attained. I also want to call attention to another phenomenon associated with emerging from the pandemic. Our year-over-year comparisons have been and will continue to be a bit wonky. This is due to timing of backlog fulfillment, whether we were in and out of stock on key products, if we ran normal promotions and many more factors. Although we see the shape of our year normalizing somewhat in fiscal 2023, we will likely have to lap this year in order to get back to some semblance of normalcy in terms of year-over-year comparisons. Against that backdrop, I'll provide what context seems to make the most sense, and let me start with revenue. In Q1, we grew revenues 7% constant currency or 1% reported to a total of $672.6 million. Foreign exchange was a $39 million headwind to revenue and was roughly in line with our expectations for the quarter. We're very encouraged by this revenue achievement, which fit with our ambitious expectations. And we're further encouraged that we beat Q1 of FY '22, which in turn beat Q1 of FY '21, even though FY '21 was in the heart of COVID demand and saw fewer supply challenges than FY '22. Quarterly registrations grew 27% year-over-year, while products sold grew 4%. Quarterly registrations for this last quarter faced a very favorable comparison as Q1 of fiscal 2022 registration growth had declined 24% year-over-year due to product supply constraints, timing of channel fill and low holiday promotional activity in that period. Looking back a year further to Q1 of fiscal 2021 to smooth comparisons, this quarter's reported revenue was up 4%, whereas registrations and products sold are down 4% and 6%, respectively. So all told, we saw revenue up from Q1 of fiscal '21 due to price increases and channel mix, but we were down to touch on units sold compared to the height of COVID demand. On a regional basis, Americas revenues grew 6% year-over-year in reported terms and accounted for 59% of sales. EMEA revenues grew 11% constant currency but declined 2% reported to account for 36% of sales. As a reminder, the bulk of our FX exposure is to the euro and, to a lesser extent, the pound. We are pleased with our constant currency performance in the EMEA region and continue to monitor the economics landscape there closely. APAC revenues declined 15% constant currency or 21% reported to account for 5% of our sales. Gross profit dollars grew 2% on a constant currency basis but declined 10% on a reported basis. Gross margins declined 540 basis points to 42.4%. While our return to a normal holiday promotion drove the bulk of the decline in gross margin, it is also worth noting that FX was a 300-basis-point headwind to gross margins. Another point to emphasize here. This quarter's gross margin should be the low point for the year and landed roughly in line with our expectations and does not change our view that we can deliver gross margins in the range of 45% to 46% for fiscal 2023. Adjusted EBITDA declined 24% to $123.9 million, representing a margin of 18.4%. The 610 basis point year-over-year decline in adjusted EBITDA margin was driven by our lower gross margin as well as non-GAAP operating expense growth of 6%. Foreign exchange was an approximately $35 million headwind to adjusted EBITDA. Total non-GAAP operating expenses of $172.3 million grew by $11.9 million or 7% from fourth quarter fiscal '22 due to increased head count as well as the reset of our bonus accrual from last year's depressed levels. These factors result in uneven year-over-year comparisons beginning in 2Q of this year. Thus, I want to emphasize that non-GAAP operating expenses should be roughly stable in absolute dollars from this quarter's level. Free cash flow was $168 million in the quarter, largely driven by $148 million decrease in inventories. Last quarter, we discussed our plans to exit Q1 with a normal -- more normal inventory position, and that is exactly what we did. At the end of the quarter, our inventory balance was $306 million, down 33% sequentially. Within inventories, finished goods were $261 million, down 36% sequentially. Our component balance of $45 million was down 5% sequentially. We ended the quarter with $432 million of cash and no debt. The increase in our cash balance was largely due to the $148 million decrease in inventory I just outlined, partially offset by the repurchase of $15 million of our stock. Last quarter, I mentioned that we were taking actions to improve our cash conversion, and I am pleased with the team's progress in that regard. One additional call-out, changes to the internal revenue code that Congress mandated back in 2017 now require that we capitalize and amortize our R&D spend. This change resulted in a $27 million hit to our net income this quarter, which naturally affects in year-over-year comparisons. We anticipate that this change in law will result in a modest increase to our cash tax rate for the full fiscal year, and we're assessing how to mitigate the impact. As Patrick mentioned, we're leaving our fiscal 2023 guidance unchanged. We continue to believe that constant currency revenue growth of 1% to 7% for the year is representative of the underlying demand that we see and the range of outcomes that the year could yield. Significant economic uncertainty remains, and we do not believe it is prudent to adjust annual expectations based on 1 quarter of performance. We're aware that the dollar has weakened from the levels we discussed last quarter, but as I mentioned earlier, the impact we felt in Q1 was roughly in line with our expectations. I will now briefly recap our fiscal '23 guidance. We continue to expect constant currency revenue growth in the range of 1% to 7%, which bakes in a $79 million FX headwind at the rate assumptions we outlined last quarter. This translates to reported revenue in the range of $1.7 billion to $1.8 billion, down 3% at the low end, up 3% at the high in reported terms. We continue to expect the gross margin to land in the range of 45% to 46%, roughly flat year-over-year. Our FX headwind assumption translates to an approximate 240 basis point headwind to gross margin for the year. We continue to guide to adjusted EBITDA of $145 million to $180 million, representing a margin of 8.5% to 10%. As previously discussed, a significant portion of the FX headwind flows directly through and reduces adjusted EBITDA. As I also mentioned earlier, we're dealing with uneven year-over-year comparisons, and that's certainly the case in the second quarter of fiscal 2023. And while it is not our practice to provide quarterly revenue guidance, we do think, given the unusual puts and takes, that it is important to explain our expectations for the shape of fiscal 2023. In the last 5 years, we have booked an average of 57% of annual revenue in the first half of the fiscal year. Excluding certain COVID-impacted periods that are not representative of our normal-course seasonality, 38% to 40% of annual revenue is generated in Q1 with Q2 generally down 55% to 60% quarter-on-quarter to be in the 16% to 17% of annual revenue range. As our business returns to more normal seasonality, we expect this year to be no different, where Q2 is our smallest revenue quarter of the year. Q2 of fiscal '22 was a completely anomalous one due to backlog fulfillment as a result of supply constraints and timing of channel fill. Thus, the year-over-year comparison of down 25% to 30% is not, I repeat, not indicative of underlying trends in the business. As Patrick emphasized, we are pleased to be tracking to a plan that allows us to continue prudent and targeted incremental investments in the business. Our investments in our product roadmap are squarely aimed at reaccelerating top-line growth to our previously achieved levels of low double digits, with adjusted EBITDA growth in excess of that. But I also want to echo his caution that should our performance in fiscal 2023 start to fall short of our expectations, we are fully prepared to take remedial actions to prioritize our key initiatives and protect the profitability of our business. Finally, I typically give a brief update on our Google litigation, but this quarter didn't see major milestones. Right now, we are heads down as we prepare for the May trial in our Northern California case and the summer hearings in the cases Google brought at the ITC. With that, I'd like to turn it over for questions.