Today, I will walk through key financial results for the quarter, our recent business highlights, and discuss the anticipated shifts in the US policy as they pertain to ChargePoint Holdings, Inc. We continue to execute on our mission for operational excellence in the fourth quarter and are pleased with the results. We delivered significant sequential improvement in adjusted EBITDA as well as cash usage. Revenue was $102 million, above the midpoint of our guidance range. Subscription revenue increased 14% year on year to $38 million in Q4. Our gross margin increased to 30% on a non-GAAP basis. Q4 non-GAAP OpEx was $52 million, which is down 42% from our high point of $89 million in Q2 of fiscal year 2024. Cash consumption reduced significantly compared to last quarter, and our ending cash balance was up by $5 million from the end of Q3. We have rationalized our cost structure and we will continue to operate efficiently. These improvements demonstrate significant progress toward our goal of achieving positive non-GAAP adjusted EBITDA for a quarter in fiscal 2026. We finished the year with 342,000 charging ports managed by our software, of which 120,000 are in Europe, and more than 33,000 are DC fast chargers. These ports drive our subscription revenue. To demonstrate our scale, between managed and roaming ports, we provide ChargePoint drivers with access to more than 1.2 million charging ports worldwide. EV adoption continues despite recent narratives to the contrary. According to the research firm, RoMotion, 2024 was a record year for global EV sales volume, with North America up 9%. The firm's January 2025 data reported North American sales up 22% year over year and Europe, including the UK, up 21%. EV sales are a natural leading indicator for our industry. As more EVs hit the road, the more chargers are needed to fuel them. Dozens of new EV models are expected to arrive this year, further expanding selection for consumers. These EVs boast features which were previously unavailable, and they are coming to market at price points closer to those of internal combustion vehicles. We believe free market forces will drive organic EV adoption in the absence of subsidies. Global automotive manufacturers, most recently Kia on February 27th, have reconfirmed their commitment to EVs, whether they continue to invest in internal combustion or not. Many institutions across industries such as retail, hospitality, and logistics are fully committed to reducing their carbon footprint. EVs remain a major part of their plans to do so. EV charging will remain the essential enabler of the transition to e-mobility. Charging sessions on the ChargePoint network continued to grow sequentially, with approximately 27 million sessions delivered in the fourth quarter. In our 17-year history, the ChargePoint network has delivered more than 322 million sessions, of which almost 30% took place during the last fiscal year. As I have said previously, we believe this demonstrates how existing EV charging infrastructure is under pressure. Additional charging capacity is moving from a want to a need. We are still seeing institutions procure charging as a marketing tactic to attract customers, a loyalty tactic to retain them, or both. Charging infrastructure has lagged behind EV adoption and it needs to catch up. We continue to make progress on our three-year business plan. To recap year one, we restructured, revised our product roadmap, set our leadership team in place, and put tremendous focus and effort into operational excellence. As we often say internally, focus plus effort equals results, and that is becoming apparent in the results we are delivering. We completed year one of our plan early and have a head start on year two. Year two of the plan prioritizes growth and innovation. Our next-generation software and hardware products will deliver, which in turn, we believe, will result in further growth. A very well-received innovation is our recently announced anti-vandalism tech. One of the industry's biggest points is station vandalism, particularly the theft of charger cables. To combat the issue, we have developed a cut-resistant cable and are offering it to the entire industry so we can collectively fight crime. This innovative approach to hardware development remains one of our four strategic cornerstones, and the hardware roadmap is not just limited to features and components. The first of several planned product announcements for 2025 will take place soon. Year three of the business plan will be reaping the benefits of this completely revamped product portfolio, which includes our next-generation software platform that will drive profitable growth.