Thank you, Tom. Hi, everyone. We're pleased to deliver Q2 financial results towards the high-end of our guidance or better. Revenue at $260 million grew 3% year-over-year versus our guidance of down 5% to up 5%. The increase was driven by home theater strength due to Arc Ultra and over the year had found Ace which we launched in June last year. We saw a great response to a targeted promotion to our installed base which was very encouraging sign from our customers. We believe this is a testament of the progress we have made improving our core experience and restoring our customers' trust. Our Q2 results also benefited from our continued investments in geographic expansion. While our growth markets represent a small share of revenue today, they grew double-digits in Q2 and the first half of the year and contributed nicely to the total revenue growth in the quarter. Expanding our presence in these markets will be a key driver of our growth in the years to come. GAAP gross margin was 43.7% towards the high-end of our guidance range driven by lower inventory reserves. Non-GAAP gross margin was 47.1%. Q2 GAAP operating expenses were $175 million down 4%. Please note that this included $20 million of restructuring charges related to the reduction in force we announced last quarter. Non-GAAP operating expenses of $135 million were down 14% year-over-year, came in about $5 million below the low end of our guidance. We saw a partial quarter benefit of savings from the reduction in force announced last quarter, as well as many other cost optimization efforts that we had set out last summer. As for the year-over-year trends in each non-GAAP operating expense category, G&A expenses decreased by 32%, driven by headcount and various cost optimization efforts initiated last year. Research and development expenses decreased by 18% with a partial quarter benefit of the February reduction in force and product roadmap rationalization. Sales and marketing expenses increased by 1% with many puts and takes. Adjusted EBITDA was negative $1 million, which was above the high-end of our guidance range by $5 million primarily due to lower operating expenses. This is a $33 million improvement from last year's Q2. For the first half of the fiscal year, revenue declined by 6.3%, driven by a 10% decline in Q1 and 3% growth in Q2. GAAP gross margin came in at 43.8% and non-GAAP at 45.4%. Our GAAP and non-GAAP operating expenses declined by 5% and 10%, respectively. Adjusted EBITDA grew 11% year-over-year, driving 170 basis points of margin improvement. Our balance sheet remains very strong as we ended the quarter with $224 million of net cash which includes $50 million of marketable securities as we hold some excess cash and short duration treasury bills. We also have $100 million of undrawn revolving credit facility at our disposal. Q2 free cash flow was negative $65 million, up from negative $121 million last year due to accounts receivable timing, inventory management and lower operating expenses as well as lower CapEx. CapEx was $6 million, down from $13 million last quarter and $10 million last year as we rationalize our spend in the near term. Please note that our free cash flow in Q2 was reduced by $24 million of non-recurring items, including $12 million of cash restructuring payments and $11 million of tax payments for intercompany transfer of IP. Excluding these items, Q2 free cash flow would have been negative $41 million, an improvement of $80 million versus Q2 last year. Our period end inventory balance decreased by 23% year-over-year to $138 million, primarily due to lower component balances. Sequentially, this was a decline of 2%. Our inventory consists of $113 million of finished goods and $26 million of components. Under our previous share repurchase authorization, we returned $33 million to shareholders in Q2, reducing our share count by 2.3 million shares. In late February, the Board of Directors approved a $150 million share repurchase authorization, all of which remains available as of Q2 period end. While returning capital to shareholders remain a key pillar of our capital allocation framework, our near-term priority is navigating this dynamic and uncertain environment with ample liquidity to preserve operational flexibility. Turning to our guidance. The Q3 outlook we're providing today reflects the demand trends we have observed quarter-to-date and does not assume any material change in consumer purchasing behavior as a result of this highly dynamic global trade environment. We expect Q3 revenue to be in the range of $310 million to $340 million, up 19% to 31% sequentially from Q2, which is consistent with past seasonality, and down 22% to down 14% year-over-year. As a reminder, last quarter we said we expect to have a very difficult year-over-year comparison in Q3 due to the launch and associated channel fill of Ace headphones towards the end of the quarter. We're not guiding Q4 at this time, but I would note that we expect revenue to grow modestly year-over-year if current conditions hold. We expect our Q3 GAAP gross margin to be in the range of 43% to 45%, with non-GAAP gross margin in the range of 45.2% to 47%. Our gross margin guidance embeds our expectations that tariff expenses will be less than $3 million in Q3 due to inventory on hand. We expect our tariff expense to rise to $5 million to $10 million in Q4. These figures do not contemplate any changes to pricing nor promotional strategy, which, as Tom mentioned, we are in the process of evaluating. Please note that the timing of cash payments for tariffs will differ from when we see the P&L expense as the cash outlay happens at the time of receipt of inventory or whereas the P&L expense is incurred when we sell the inventory. On a cash basis, we expect to pay $5 million to $10 million of tariffs in Q3, which may rise to as much as $20 million to $30 million in Q4 as we build inventory ahead of our holiday quarter. The cash outlay and P&L expense resulting from tariffs will ultimately be determined by both tariff rates and how much inventory purchases we accelerate. We expect Q3 GAAP operating expenses to be in the range of $157 million to $162 million, down 9% to 12% from $179 million in Q3 last year. We expect non-GAAP operating expenses to be in the range of $135 million to $140 million, down 10% to 13% from $155 million in Q3 last year. This is lower than the 14% decline we saw in Q2, primarily due to lower variable compensation expense in Q3 last year. On a normalized basis, our guidance implies non-GAAP operating expenses declined by 19% to 22% from Q3 of last year. Bringing it all together, we expect Q3 adjusted EBITDA to be in the range of $12 million to $37 million, representing a margin of approximately 4% to 11%. Lastly, I want to provide an update on the transformation journey we embarked on last year. Following the update we provided in Q1, we have continued to make great progress driving efficiencies in our business and improving our cost structure. Accordingly, we are raising our annualized run rate savings for both GAAP and non-GAAP operating expenses. For GAAP operating expenses, we now estimate that our run rate base is $640 million to $670 million, down $100 million to $130 million from our normalized fiscal 2024 GAAP operating expenses of $770 million, a reduction of 13% to 17%. This represents incremental savings of $40 million to $60 million versus the targets we outlined last quarter. For non-GAAP operating expenses, we now estimate that our run rate expense base is $580 million to $600 million, down $80 million to $100 million from our normalized fiscal 2024 non-GAAP operating expenses of $680 million, a reduction of 12% to 15%. This represents incremental savings of $20 million to $30 million versus the target we outlined last quarter. The new run rate expense range for GAAP operating expenses is wider than the range for non-GAAP operating expenses due to potential variability in our expectations for non-GAAP adjustments, primarily stock-based compensation. Reducing management layers through our reorganization efforts has helped reduce the impact of stock-based compensation on our shareholders. Actions that we have taken should serve to strengthen the business and allow us to continue to invest in most impactful growth opportunities, while structurally improving our profitability. And most importantly, this should enable us to emerge from this uncertain period in a stronger position. After the call, we will update our earnings slides to reflect the following items; our Q3 guidance, our expected tariff exposures, and expense savings that I just walked through. With that, I'd like to turn the call over for questions.