Thank you, Heather, and good afternoon, everyone. 2024 has been a great year for Butterfly so far. During the quarter we continued to accelerate our revenue momentum, continued to become more efficient, and continued our investment in our future. Earlier this year, we held an Investor Day, where we gave a look under the hood at our most robust roadmap and introduced pillars for our strong path forward. These pillars include, one, accelerating growth in our core focus business. Two, expanding our market and becoming more accessible to new user bases and new care settings such as the home. Three, investing in R&D to maintain our differentiated tech and especially in our semiconductor innovation. And four, executing these pillars to drive our pathway to profitability and we have a plan to get there. Throughout today's call, it should be clear that we are executing against these goals. The last quarter we raised our guidance to $75 million to $80 million or 15% to 20% growth year-over-year. As part of this we mentioned that the second quarter would be our toughest comp for the year due to two non-recurring large medical school deals that happened the year prior. Regardless of this one-time event we blew past our numbers. In Q2 we posted $21.5 million in revenue, represented 16% year-over-year growth. The highest quarterly revenue in Butterfly's history. So this outcome demonstrates that we're delivering and our plan is working. So before I get into commercial progress I'd like to discuss the cost side of the business. In July we completed an initiative that achieved an additional annualized cost reduction of $10 million. Heather will go into more detail shortly. Over the past two years we reduced our cash use to now under $50 million a year, while re-energizing our top line and extending our cash runway into 2027. All the while, we're continually identifying ways to become more efficient, while investing in our commercial organization and maintaining the commitment to our technological advancements in chips, digital, and new form factors. This is not an easy task to balance the growth investment and cost reduction. I am so proud of the team. They're maturing into an execution machine delivering increasing value to our shareholders every day. Now turning to sales. As I mentioned, we grew revenue 16%. This was driven by iQ3 sales and an ASP uplift in the U.S. as well as stellar performance from our international team, who launched iQ3 in Canada at the start of the quarter, added newly EU MDR cleared advanced features on our international iQ+ product, and opened new markets in Southeast Asia. On top of that, it was a quarter of strong enterprise software sales. I am very pleased with the quality of this quarter's revenue because we delivered sustainable and repeatable business across our channels. In Q2 iQ3 continued to be a complete success commercially and clinically. We are actively involved in several health system deals that we previously would not have been competitive in. Our online customers purchased iQ3 74% of the time. In Canada iQ3 represented 89% of sales across all channels. We've upgraded over a thousand probes this quarter to iQ3 and just launched a competitive device upgrade allowing customers to turn their old non-butterfly product into butterfly for a new iQ3. When we look at utilization data launching iQ3, we're pleased to see, accelerate the use of our cardiac and OB presets. We'll continue to analyze these trends but we believe this to be a testament to our improved image quality that's critical for these advanced specialists. I mentioned that Q2 was our toughest comp due to last year's large medical school deals. We've had tremendous success over the years in placing our technology in medical school programs. So historically Butterfly built the medical school segment primarily relying on a combination of smaller deals putting probes in the lab for students to share or large-scale one-to-one deployments that were typically made possible by medical school donor funding. We of course enjoy those large orders. It's just as a public company big one-time events are hard to anniversary. So this quarter we saw a large number of medical schools purchasing probes directly, showing us the market is ever maturing. ScanLab has been huge for us. ScanLab has strengthened our position by proving to be a very valuable asset in helping medical schools be more-and-more confident in going to a one-to-one model since they often lack ultrasound educators. A student truly learns ultrasound when they have their own device because they can practice on their own. ScanLab gives them their own AI instructor on their iPad to be there with them helping them hone their skills making a one-to-one model even easier to implement. So to expand on this like Apple did in the 80s and 90s, Butterfly is partnering with schools to create a seamless pathway for their students to purchase a Butterfly through a campus store discount. They get their textbooks, their pencils and laptops and their Butterfly. All essentials for the next chapter of their careers. This quarter's campus store pilot program at a leading medical school offered 300 eligible students the opportunity to purchase their own Butterfly. Their choice of an iQ+ or an iQ3. 232 of them bought a probe before the semester started and a third of those students even opted to buy the premium iQ3. Like Apple when you engage them young you develop a lifetime of familiarity and relationship. You develop a common language and then you do everything to maintain that belonging into the future. With several years building medical school programs behind us it's exciting to see many graduating classes this year heading into residency with ultrasound skills. The Butterfly army is growing. Students trained on Butterfly are transforming healthcare by being the most sought-after candidates for residency programs and shepherding in the new era of point-of-care ultrasound, when they get into clinical practice. Gosh residents with ultrasound skills are just invaluable. It's where the industry is headed. Ultrasound capability is being demanded at hospitals. Doctors without ultrasound skills need to learn them or will simply be marginalized by their juniors. There is a seismic shift happening in diagnostic imaging and Butterfly is a catalyst. Our medical school strategy is shaping the future. So in sum, we have a really bright outlook with medical schools. Butterfly no longer needs to depend on large donation-based opportunities given that we've built a model that will support sustainable revenue growth. There are about 100,000 medical students at any given time and 25,000 new first-year students annually in the U.S. alone. Ten other programs have agreed to go live on our campus essentials program and we're working on many more. This will not only deliver a more stable recurring revenue model for the company but it will also allow evergreen purchasing that is not based on hospital budget cycles as they are now. So let's now discuss our developments in AI. Butterfly posted more wins this quarter for Butterfly Garden powered by Butterfly and our internal AI developments. In-house we have many AI tools that we're developing and we'll have a series of releases scheduled for next year. As a reminder, we have the largest private ultrasound image repository in the world. 21 million images growing at about 30,000 a day and that enables us to quickly develop new tools. It also allows us to use our capabilities to amplify other ultrasound AI companies and expose them then to the largest handheld ultrasound marketplace in the world. In Q2 we increased our Butterfly Garden partners to a total of 15 and have also signed the term sheet for our third powered by Butterfly chip licensing deal. We announced that HeartFocus by DESKi, UltraSight and SouthWood signed to the Butterfly Garden. We're very excited to have them join our effort and are pleased with the amount of new cardiac AI platforms that are choosing Butterfly Garden as the marketplace to bring their advanced technologies. While Big Ultrasound is buying a few AI companies for themselves, Butterfly is building a premier AI ecosystem for everyone. This makes Butterfly the only independent AI ultrasound marketplace and it also will allow Butterfly customers access to the best new AI tools available without needing multiple platforms. Butterfly customers will purchase new ultrasound AI products to advance their clinical care and all independent developers will build with us to access the marketplace. This is a win-win-win and it's happening now. Our partners ThinkSono was the first garden partner to commercially launch their deep vein thrombosis training tool. We launched it to all of our customers and are making progress getting the message out. Next year they expect to launch their clinical DVT guidance tool upon winning regulatory clearance. In 2025 we also see a cohort of Butterfly Garden and Powered by Butterfly partners commercialize their offerings providing a new and growing reoccurring revenue stream for Butterfly. So this quarter we also signed a term sheet for our third Powered by Butterfly partner. This company is already commercial and the next version of their product will leverage our proprietary ultrasound on chip. We are not announcing their name yet so we don't disrupt their current commercial activities. Of the three partners we anticipate they will be the first to market next year. So they will not only deliver some technical revenue this year for Butterfly we expect them to deliver revenue from commercial activities as soon as next year. We look forward to announcing this partnership when they're ready to launch commercially and are excited today to share the continued success of our Powered by Butterfly program. I want to remind you that each of these Powered by Butterfly deals are complex requiring research and development and a regulatory strategy yet have a very high opportunity ceiling for Butterfly. We have at least 15 other partners in our pipeline and are actively negotiating with five of them concurrently. The interest in Butterfly and accessing our proprietary and protected technology has been extraordinary. We are doing everything to keep up with demand. As I've stated in the past this effort has the opportunity to deliver non-dilutive capital to the company and at the right time I'll update you more on that. So before I turn it over to Heather, I'd like to touch on a few parallel momentum drivers in the clinical and regulatory space. So first on the clinical front, we told you at our investor day that heart failure management is an area of great opportunity for Butterfly with a rising patient population and hospitals working hard to tackle readmission challenges. Recent research has been published in the academic emergency medicine journal further validating the clinical significance of Butterfly in the space. The studies demonstrated that not only was it easy for paramedics to master lung ultrasound with Butterfly devices but the pre-hospital scanning reduced time to acute heart failure treatment by over two hours compared to routine care. This early initiation of heart failure therapy is crucial and it's associated with lower mortality and hospital readmission rates. We also introduced bladder scanning as our second primary use case for home care. Progress is happening here too. The Christopher Reeve Foundation just launched a study of their own to validate that bladder self-scanning can revolutionize care management for patients with spinal cord injuries. So next we're proud to share that after rigorous vetting Butterfly iQ+ was recognized by the World Health Organization in its 2024 compendium of innovative health technologies for low resource settings. Inclusion in this manual further legitimizes our device and we continue engaging with foreign governments and funders for our global health initiatives. Lastly, I'd like to update you on our efforts to overturn the exemption big ultrasound gets from the RoHS standards in Europe. We've been working closely this quarter with the European Commission on how Butterfly's petition can be heard. You see for the last 20 years or so, the ultrasound industry has gained compliance to the EU's restrictions on hazardous substances directive or RoHS only via an exemption. These incumbent ultrasound devices contain hazardous levels of lead in their piezoelectric crystals above the standards set for toxic materials and electronic devices and are exempted now only because there's been no clean alternative presented to the commission. These exemptions are time limited and intended to bridge compliance until big ultrasound can produce cleaner products. But since they get this exemption, why should they invest in an alternative? Periodically, big ultrasound files for exemption renewals stating that there's no alternative and their toxic devices remain worthy of the exemption. In my view, that's all about the change. Butterfly is demonstrating to the European Commission that there is now a clean alternative that doesn't rely on lead crystals or the exemption and that the alternative is the CMUT technology utilized in our devices including Butterfly iQ3. And this showcases the rapid technological evolution of our CMUT chips. Just weeks ago we filed for what is called revocation. Revocation is a formal process to petition for cancellation of a prior exemption given. After going through this process, it seems Butterfly may be one of if not the first company filing for such a request in the 20-year history of the RoHS directive. While the EC is currently reviewing previously filed applications by big ultrasound to renew their exemption in parallel, they will now be considering whether it's warranted in the first place and whether they should be revoked for all piezo-based handheld devices altogether. So stay tuned because we believe an exemption renewal decision will be made one way or the other in the first half of '25. And now I'll turn it back over to Heather.