Thank you, Teresa, and thank you, everyone, for joining us today. In Joby's first quarterly results call as a public company, two years ago this month, we highlighted three long-term goals required to execute on our business plan. First, certifying our aircraft. Second, scaling our manufacturing, and third, preparing for commercial operations. Since then, we've been absolutely laser-focused on these three goals, and we've established a pattern of delivering against them consistently each quarter and this quarter is no different. On certification, the FAA has now accepted 84% of our Stage 3 certification plans, including the plan that covers our batteries and high-voltage power distribution. This is a critically important milestone for us that builds on a long history of battery development and testing, and brings us one important step closer to certification. We're now proceeding at pace in our work on Stage 4, which Didier will speak about in a moment. On our second key goal of scaling manufacturing, we are ramping up production at our pilot manufacturing facility in Marina, California, with one aircraft in final assembly and two more coming along behind it and building on the learnings from our pilot production plant, we announced this quarter that we have selected Dayton, Ohio, as the location for our first scaled manufacturing facility. Dayton was the home of the Wright Brothers, and America's first aircraft factory and today, it maintains a deep talent pool for both commercial and defense aerospace. It is also home to the Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, which directs more than 40% of Air Force spending. In his speech at our announcement event, Ohio Governor, Mike DeWine said, the aircraft that will roll off the Joby production line in Ohio will redefine urban transportation. I absolutely agree with that sentiment, and we were pleased to be offered up to $325 million in state and local incentives to support the development of our facility there. Toyota, who have played a vital role in the successful launch of production at Marina earlier this year, have their largest U.S. factory just down the road from Dayton in Georgetown, Kentucky and we look forward to their continued support as we bring our Ohio facility online. Just a week after making our Ohio announcement, we were at Edwards Air Force Base in California to celebrate a significant milestone on our journey toward our third goal, preparing for commercial service. Several months ahead of schedule, we delivered [indiscernible] the first of up to nine aircraft included as part of an expanded AFWERX Agility Prime contract with the U.S. Air Force. Our aircraft became the first electric air taxi to be delivered to the Air Force, and it will be used to demonstrate a range of logistics missions, including cargo and passenger transportation. It will be operated by both Joby and U.S. Air Force personnel, providing invaluable operational and training experience for us as we prepare for the launch of commercial passenger service. NASA also intends to use the aircraft for research purposes that will support the scaling of our industry. NASA Administrator, Bill Nelson, posted about the delivery, saying that the future of aviation is here, and his excitement is indicative of the support we're seeing from all areas of government. At the state and local level, there is a great deal of enthusiasm and support from the warm welcome and incentives we received in Ohio to Governor, Newsom, signing legislation in California that brings the entire state government together in a unified way to prepare for commercial operations. That same enthusiasm was present at a community event we hosted in New York City recently, where Delta CEO, Ed Bastian and I were joined by Rick Cotton, the Executive Director of the Port Authority of New York at New Jersey, and Andrew Kimball, the President and CEO of the New York City Economic Development Corporation. Both are leaning in to ensure that New York City leads the way on the adoption of this new technology. And at the federal level, we welcome the Senate's unanimous bipartisan confirmation of Mike Whitaker as the next FAA Administrator. The United States leads the world in aviation safety, innovation and regulation, and we believe this appointment will provide the strong and steady leadership required to ensure that continues. While it has been incredibly rewarding to celebrate the hard work of our team through many landmark achievements this quarter, nothing gives me greater pleasure than to stand with a guest at our facility in Marina as they witness our eVTOL aircraft fly for the first time. During the quarter, Toyota Group CEO, Koji Sato and Toyota CTO, Hiroki Nakajima joined us in California to see a test flight and visit our manufacturing facilities. We also welcome members of the FK Telecom team and the Governor of Jeju Province in Korea. We are grateful for all of the deep partnerships we are building around the world and we look forward to expanding on these in the years ahead. For all of our guests, seeing really is believing and being able to demonstrate the performance of our aircraft and its low acoustic footprint day in and day out is so important to our work. I was therefore very pleased to see our flight test program expanded this quarter to include flying with a pilot on board. During the test, four of our pilots assessed the ease of conducting a number of maneuvers that pilots will be required to perform during normal operations, including holding a precise hover, tracking the runway center line, and decelerating to a vertical landing. They also perform more complex maneuvers such as flying precise circles around a center point, something which is considerably simpler in our aircraft than in a helicopter. These tests provide important data and feedback to advance our program and I'm incredibly grateful to every member of our team that made it possible. I also want to congratulate our H2FLY team in Germany for their own flight test campaign. During the quarter, they completed the first ever piloted flight of a liquid hydrogen electric aircraft, an incredible milestone on the path to making long range emissions free flight a reality. Just like the team at Joby working on battery electric aviation, they too are focused on delivery and they continue to knock it out of the park. At the beginning of my remarks, I mentioned the three goals that we set ourselves when Joby first listed two years ago, certifying our aircraft, scaling manufacturing, and preparing for commercial operations. Looking back over this quarter, I'm pleased to see that we've made incredible progress in each of these areas, but I'm also pleased to see that we continue to deliver on two other values we identified during that call, maintaining fiscal discipline and a strong balance sheet and being transparent about our progress. We continue to have the strongest balance sheet in the sector and we continue to publish detailed updates about our certification and manufacturing progress like clockwork each quarter and to talk more about that progress, I'd like to hand it over to Didier.