Thank you, Heather. I am very pleased we're able to deliver an increase in guidance on the top and bottom line again. Butterfly is executing on its vision to reimagine imaging digitally and delivering disruptive technology every day and expect to continue to take market share from our competitors. As each day goes by, the world realizes our firm belief that Butterfly is the future. Now let's look more into that future, as outlined during Investor Day. So as I mentioned at the top of the call, we laid out our growth initiatives for the next five years during the March event. We showed our priorities, an overview of our roadmap and a plan to get to 35% CAGR over the next five years. As we're delivering our numbers in our core business today, we're about to start layering in new revenue on top of that performance. Pillar number two is continuing to invest in R&D particularly semiconductor innovation to drive our technology beyond a handheld growth for focus. You've all heard me speak about our digital journey and how we strive to and succeeded at achieving image parity with piezo-based crystal devices. At Investor Day, we showed you the performance characteristics of our second and third generation chips demonstrating that iQ3 proved Moore's Law true again by doubling the processing power of our prior chip. We affirmed that our investment in cutting-edge semiconductor development would continue and we previewed our intended performance characteristics of our fourth-generation P5 chip as well as our fifth generation Apollo chip. You all now have witnessed firsthand how the markets accepted our third-generation iQ3. Like in 2003, when image quality of digital cameras met the capabilities of film, the market quickly replaced film with digital. That is happening now for traditional handheld ultrasound. Well, two weeks ago, my team and I saw the first images produced by our fourth generation semiconductor P5. We were all blown away with this next revolution. P5 dramatically increases mechanical pressure and for the first time in history, achieves harmonics in digital imaging. This is the Holy Grail for digital imaging. Until now, no one thought it was possible, where iQ3 builds equivalents to handhelds, P5 clears the path for Butterfly to enter the ultrasound cart business in the future. In fact, we are developing our own cart, the Butterfly iQ Station. In early January, I intend to share some P5 images with you and discuss our vision for taking market share with the in-hospital iQ Station in the future. P5 will not only help replace many of our competitors' card offerings. It will be added into our current handheld probe to deliver the most powerful handheld image in the world. Since we're talking about the power of our CMUT chip versus piezo crystals, let me take a moment to update you on RoHS or actually what I've learned, it's actually pronounced RoHS. In early September, I met with EU officials who administer the RoHS exemption revisions. I communicated with them that Butterfly is the first commercial ultrasound product in history, to meet the intended RoHS environmental standards without exemption. We discussed the regulations, its implementation and a process where in Butterfly's view the commission would no longer need to grant exemptions to led piezo crystal ultrasound handhelds. Our green technology was highly welcomed by the commission officials who noted that the information we brought to them was very important for innovation and the EU's green vision overall. According to the European Commission President, Ursula von der Leyen, the EU wants to become a global leader in circular economy and reducing harmful substances and products is a vital part of that. We're delighted that our technology can lead the way towards such important ambitions. Last week, Butterfly formerly refiled with the European Commission for the exemptions to be revoked by incorporating their supportive feedback into a dossier to make our case. From the timeline they gave us, we should know their decision by this time next year, and if positive, see enforcement plans begin a year following that. For those who want to learn more, you can find a link on the slide here, where you can read the applications made by big ultrasound. And the reasons why after 17 years of grace from the European Commission, they continue to fail to meet standards, it's in their own words. I'd like to bring something to light. I've learned that in the ultrasound industry, companies can legally label themselves RoHS compliant even if it's under an exemption. This means the ultrasound industry, in effect, are telling consumers that their products meet standards when they in truth don't. They only achieved compliance to loss due to an exemption. The ultrasound probe their selling still has led. Imagine buying food labeled organic, that's not really organic, but they can say it's organic because the government lets them. It's completely legal, but in my view, it's misleading to call yourself RoHS compliant and really a deceptive marketing practice beneath the caliber of the great companies who are lowering themselves by doing it. Consumers need to know when they're buying a lead-based product and indirectly contributing to lead mining and lead disposal in their environment. I plan to educate clinicians of this practice and call on these companies to cease labeling their devices RoHS compliant until they actually meet the environmental test of the RoHS standards. So now moving to pillar three. At the Investor Day, we introduced you to Butterfly HomeCare. Butterfly HomeCare is a service business that's powered by all our technology and strives to support caregivers helping patients outside the hospital deal with aging and living a better life of chronic conditions. Having a sophisticated imaging capability convenient to where the patient is, Butterfly strives to use advanced hardware education and AI to make diagnostic imaging easy, cost-effective and available to everyone. Butterfly HomeCare will be a substantial service business, which over the next five years as our technology evolves, will be powered even further by wearable ultrasound as we have always envisioned. After introducing this concept in March, I'm pleased to update you that Butterfly HomeCare will be starting in the fourth quarter of 2024, its first pilot for our virtual chronic care management services with a major at-risk Medicare advantage provider in the U.S. The goal will be to reduce readmissions of the congestive heart failure patient population through frequent AI-powered imaging. If successful, it will be our first foray into a services business model where Butterfly participates in the service revenue on a PMPM basis. Based on the applicable at-home patient populations, this new revenue stream has the potential to rival Butterfly's current revenues in the future. Next quarter, I intend to update you on the pilot, the strategy in more detail and its meaning for 2025. My last update involves the next step for our Powered By Butterfly initiative, which enables us to license, sell and develop our powerful semiconductor technology to non-competitive companies and new industries. When I joined Butterfly in April of last year, I asked this question. Is our ultrasound on chip a focus only technology? Or did we solve a universal problem making it foundational? Well, the answer is now clear. It's foundational. We've learned so much over the past year and have been amazed by the demand to develop cutting-edge non-competitive applications all built on our foundational ultrasound on chip platform. The market opportunity outside of Butterfly's use of the chip may actually be far greater than Butterfly's opportunity alone. So we've begun to explore different vehicles to commercialize and monetize the value of the chip. So I'm announcing today that Butterfly is forming a wholly-owned subsidiary called Octiv, spelled o-c-t-i-v. Octiv will be run by two of our best executives, Butterfly Co-Founder, Nevada Sanchez, and Darius Shahida, our current Chief Strategy Officer. There will be unique opportunities in health care that are not on the Butterfly roadmap as well as new sectors such as consumer electronics, nautical, military, security, aeronautics and other industries using ultrasound in their products and processes today. To fully capitalize on the opportunity, Darius and Nevada will be building a team which will remain 100% focused on the opportunity. Octiv will have exclusive license to all Butterfly IP and will have the freedom to modify and develop new technology. To help with this endeavor, Butterfly has decided to sell a minority stake in that business, bringing in new investors will increase access to capital, increased focus while rewarding Butterfly's shareholders for some of the over $300 million in investment they made in the development of ultrasound on chip since inception. With the discussions I’ve had personally with investors to date, I’m confident in our ability to successfully raise the capital through Octiv. When successful, I believe it can bridge Butterfly to cash flow independence. As we will still be an owner of Octiv, we will continue to layer their growing revenue stream on top of the other revenue opportunities previously mentioned. So, that brings us back to pillar number four. Executing to return the company to double digit growth, get to cash flow break even by or perhaps before 2027 and achieving $500 million in top line revenue in five years. I hope it goes without saying after today’s call that we are well positioned to deliver on those goals. I am very proud of our team. We are very bullish on our near term opportunity and excited about the progress being made towards our long-term plans. Butterfly is proving to be the disruptor in digital imaging that you all thought and hoped it would be. We are rewriting the rules and will be the clear winner in this space. So, with that operator please open it up for questions.