Thank you, Mick, and good morning, everyone. Today, I'll begin with an overview of our third quarter results and then touch on some recent key accomplishments and announcements. I'll then ask our CFO, Jeff Creech, to take us through the Q3 in greater detail before closing the call with comments on our outlook, after which we're happy to take questions. So let's start on Slide 5. At a high level, our third quarter revenue largely represents a continuation of the trends that we and the additive industry broadly have been contending with for several quarters now. Very simply, macroeconomic and geopolitical uncertainties have caused our customers to reduce CapEx spending for new capacity in their factories, which in turn has created a persistent headwind to hardware system sales. It's really that simple. As a consequence, our revenues were essentially flat on a sequential basis. This was slightly weaker than we had anticipated as a few key installations of new systems, which were targeted for acceptance late in Q3, slipped into the fourth quarter. However, while the sale of new printing systems is still sluggish, what is changing for the better is the utilization rate of our installed base, as indicated by rising sales of consumables to our customers. Consumable materials grew approximately 10% from the prior year and demonstrated sustained sequential growth, a trajectory that has consistently improved since the beginning of the year, most recently growing 9% sequentially in the third quarter versus Q2. In a similar vein, interest in new application development has been on a very robust trajectory. As many of you know, we have one of the largest and most capable application engineering groups in the world. These engineers work directly with our customers on new applications for both metal and polymer 3D printing. Year-to-date, revenues from our industrial application group are up 26% from last year and continue to rise. We monitor this activity level as a directional indicator of growth potential for important new applications. The performance we experienced in Q3 is a strong indicator of continuing growth in customer interest in 3D printing for their production needs. We expect this interest to ultimately translate into more robust sales as the economic environment improves. To provide a little more color on where this interest is coming from, leading the way are what we refer to as the high reliability markets, such as energy, oil & gas, semiconductor equipment manufacturing, and aerospace and defense, all of which have a very high standard for component quality, performance, reliability, and traceability. For these customers, which are often subject to strict regulatory requirements, the ability of both our polymer and metal printing solutions to meet their needs and to do so with compelling economics is a cornerstone of our value proposition. As an example of markets that I'm particularly excited about these days are those driven by the $1 trillion investments being made in AI. These investments cascade directly into several of our targeted end markets, ranging from semiconductor equipment manufacturing to data centers to the power generation equipment needed to provide electricity critical to their operation. As just one example, the management of heat is absolutely essential to both the manufacture of silicon chips, as well as their performance and life in a data center environment. The nanoscale of advanced microprocessors, combined with the extraordinary number used in a modern data center, creates an extremely challenging environment to keep the processors cool in operation. One way to effectively do so is through the use of high purity copper elements that can be placed in or very near the heart of a GPU. Combining the inherent capability of 3D printing to manufacture complex, high surface area components with our unique capability to print ultra-high purity copper with our advanced metal printing systems gives GPU and data center architects a powerful means of removing heat effectively from the system. Given that the power consumed by data centers now exceeds that of many small countries, this cooling capability is increasingly valuable. And this is just one example of our increasing focus on the full semiconductor ecosystem that we believe will provide one avenue for meaningful growth for our company in the future. Another market we continue to be excited about is high-performance automotive, an example of which is F1 racing. As an example, you may have seen our announcement earlier this month with Sauber Motorsports. In this case, we updated the entire Sauber production facility, as they added 10 of our newest production printer systems to their manufacturing workflow. This included eight of our market-leading SLA 750 dual laser printers and two of our just-released PSLA 270 platform, all enabled by a host of industry-leading high-performance materials. Sauber will use these systems in large part to validate their aerodynamic designs through rapid fabrication of production components for wind tunnel testing. This award builds on a nearly 20-year relationship between our companies, reflecting the trust they have in our technological leadership and outstanding service capabilities, both of which are essential to their success in this challenging industry. This important win adds a strong new element to our automotive foundation, a market which is expected to grow to almost $8 billion in the next few years. Since I mentioned it, let me take a moment to focus on our newest photopolymer printing platform, the PSLA 270. This is the first of what will be a family of new projector-over-VAT printing systems, combining the superior surface quality associated with our flagship SLA printing platform with the blazing speeds offered by the latest high resolution projector technology. This technology is an outgrowth of our work in regenerative medicine, which incorporates a very high resolution projection system. By replacing a single point laser with a full field projection system, we attain high precision at much higher print speeds. In fact, the closest competitive solution today would have to run two machines simultaneously to achieve the same output as one PSLA 270. In addition, this system is designed to use our entire portfolio of advanced polymers originally developed for the Figure 4 system. By offering this exceptional platform as a part of a complete factory workflow, we believe our PSLA platforms will lead the industry forward in photopolymer applications. From a healthcare standpoint, the third quarter was strong, with solid growth on a sequential and year-over-year basis. We attribute this growth to a meaningful recovery in dental, up well over 30%, and another impressive performance in personalized health care, which was up almost 20%. Given the momentum we have in our health care business broadly and our strong pipeline of new products and applications ahead, we remain very excited about the future of this portion of our business. From a gross margin standpoint, the third quarter was softer than we had anticipated, predominantly driven by an increase in inventory reserves and continued lower factory utilization, both driven by softness and printer volumes. Jeff Creech will take you through the specifics in more detail shortly, but after normalizing for inventory reserves, our third quarter operating margins were roughly in line with recent performance. We continue to target a business model that can deliver mid-40% margins or greater over time once the benefits of our insourcing and restructuring initiatives are fully realized with increasing volume. Operating expenses for the quarter were consistent with our expectations. We're pleased that our restructuring actions have started to more positively influence performance, representing a nearly $3 million sequential improvement. And while our overall OpEx expenses are declining, we continue to invest extensively in our R&D activities, which is fueling a historic year of product innovation for our company. More on this in just a few moments. While we're encouraged by some of the leading indicators that we're now seeing, we also recognize that the revenue environment we're operating in today demands an even greater degree of operational efficiency to gain sustained profitability, which is our clear goal. As such, operating expenses remain a strong focus and a lever largely within our direct control in this environment. With that in mind, we maintain our goal of reducing operating expenses to below $6 million for the [Technical Difficulty] quarter, with the majority of this improvement coming from reductions in G&A. Lastly, to our balance sheet, where we've been focused on optimizing working capital as we position ourselves for future growth. We entered 2024 with a goal to deliver inventory reductions as a healthy generator of cash throughout the year. Today, we remain on pace to reach our target of a 20% inventory reduction by year-end. Over the course of the third quarter, cash on our balance sheet declined $3 million from the prior quarter, a significant rate improvement from prior quarters. This leaves us with one of the strongest cash positions of any company in our industry. On Slide 6, I'd like to take a few moments to reflect on the historic year of progress across our technology roadmap. You've heard this from us many times before, but as the inventor of the technology that birthed the 3D printing industry, our dedication to innovation is a core element of our company culture. Maintaining momentum with mission critical R&D, even though a challenging sales environment is not only fundamentally different than most of our peers, but it's embedded deeply in our DNA. This is the primary reason customers turn to 3D systems first in assessing the capability of 3D printing to meet their metal and polymer production needs. Reflecting this commitment, you witnessed an unprecedented pace of innovation from our company over the last 12-months, contributing nearly 40 new materials, software enhancements, and metal and polymer printing platforms since Q3 of last year 25 in this year alone. And the momentum will continue as we exit this year and move into ‘25. This represents the culmination of three years of focus and investment as we're refreshing our entire portfolio of plant printing platforms and the materials and software that enable their outstanding production performance. From a key application standpoint, during the third quarter we announced QuickCast Air, which is targeted for the investment casting market. This casting method is essential to aircraft and rocket propulsion systems and other high performance applications. It's expected to reach nearly $34 billion over the next 10-years. QuickCast Air reliably delivers a large, high-precision investment casting pattern in a fraction of the time and cost of traditional methods, providing up to a 50% reduction in resin usage in some cases, while maintaining the inherent advantage of virtually unlimited geometric complexity of design. The result for our customers is higher performing components at lower cost and in much shorter production cycle times for their most demanding applications. On the software front, we announced a significant milestone in commercializing our Oqton Industrial MOS platform with our strategic partner, Baker Hughes. Our software, which is now utilized in Baker's Houston, Texas manufacturing facility is enabling on-demand additive manufacturing to provide full factory floor workflow integration, automation, control, and optimization. Its production implementation is providing key proof points, such as a 98% reduction in active monitoring engineering time, a savings of 136 engineering hours per printer annually, and an 18% reduction in costs associated with scrap due to real-time actionable alerts during component production. Turning to healthcare, our personalized healthcare business delivered another quarter of meaningful growth. During the quarter, we were very pleased to announce that we're once again expanding our orthopedic surgical planning portfolio, this time with FDA clearance for our new total ankle patient matched guides to pair with Smith & Nephew's total ankle replacement solution. This expands our patient-specific surgical solution capabilities in a market anticipated to grow to over $5 billion the next few years. Today, we're exceptionally well positioned in the cranial, maxillofacial, and spinal markets, and new FDA-approved solutions such as this highlight our ability to expand our orthopedic applications much further in the human body. We're also leveraging our expertise in surgical solutions into adjacent markets, rolling out expanded capabilities to address the needs of trauma patients in addition. We see opportunities to expand our personalized health service in Europe and elsewhere, and are investing accordingly to ensure regulatory approvals are acquired. These growth elements reinforce our enthusiasm about our growth in this key area of our company. For our dental activities, a key growth engine for the future is the multi-billion dollar dentures market. In an important milestone, we secured FDA clearance in September for our first-to-market multi-material single-piece jetted denture solution. Our unique denture offering provides unparalleled combination of toughness to ensure long-term reliability with outstanding aesthetics for enhanced patient experience. As previously shared, we found an excellent launch partner in Glidewell, one of the world's largest producers of restorative dental devices, who's hit the ground running with implementing jetted dentures into its workflow following our clearance with the FDA. We're excited to see this product enter the market in the coming months. To wrap up my introduction, undoubtedly 2024 has been a difficult sales environment. But with our strong balance sheet, we've delivered tremendous progress transforming our technology portfolio. Formnext, the largest AM conference of the year that was just held last week, gave us an opportunity to highlight this journey with the announcement of several new product introductions. In addition to our metal and PSLA polymer platforms, we highlighted our newest Titan Extrusion Platform, which is our inroad into the industrial extrusion printing market. The EXT family, as we call it, includes the 1270, the 1070, and our newest addition, the 800. Provides novel approach to extrusion technology, offering a hybrid solution that can accommodate pellets, filaments, and traditional CNC machining all in one platform. Delivering speeds of 5 times to 10 times faster and having raw material cost roughly 10 times lower than its closest competitor, we see increasing interest from our customers around the world for this family of products. Rounding things out, we've also announced a plethora of new materials supporting our SLA, NJP, and SLS platforms, further expanding the broadest portfolio of additive solutions in the industry, and setting the stage for us to drive increased adoption in the years ahead. So with that I'll turn things over to our CFO Jeff Creech for more on the quarter. Jeff?