Thanks, Sam, and thank you all for joining us today. I'm excited to share a quarterly update and provide some insight into the progress we've made over the past quarter. By way of introduction and a little bit of background and history in Oklo, the company was born largely out of the view that there was a significant amount of opportunity with advanced nuclear technologies. Personally, I grew up in New Mexico. I was born and raised there and born and raised around the technology accordingly. And that's where I fell in love with it from a very young age. It was something that felt like it was from science fiction, but it was actually real. The fact that you can take an atom and split it and harness the strong nuclear force and produce 50 million times more energy than a conventional hydrocarbon oxidation reaction is crazy to me. It's always been crazy to me. It still is today, but it's real. This is real technology. And it's been with us for over 80 years at this point. So I knew I wanted to work on it from a young age and I had a unique set of experiences to be around the technology. In high school, I got hired into the nuclear weapons program and I got a chance to learn a lot about it from that point. And from there, I got a chance to springboard into a number of different facets of the industry, from academic and government R&D, to licensing and procurement on the fuel enrichment side, to commercial reactor design and R&D, as well as research projects on the academic side, touching conventional large light water reactors, as well as next generation advanced reactors. Along this path, I started to see a clear picture of what I thought was the case. When I went into it, which was new technologies were going to be what ushered in some of these new areas of growth for nuclear. But that was only part of the story. In fact, it was much more oriented to fundamentally needing to do some new things in a space. What I observed was an industry that had fairly radically stagnated in how it did things and approached things. And there was a ton of opportunity to rethink about how you could approach taking new nuclear technologies to market. So that led my Co-Founder Caroline and I to think about and ultimately start a company sitting around three major pillars that we saw were really important to catalyzing significant changes and opportunities in the industry. Those centered around taking, first, a different approach on the business model, second, a different approach around the size of the reactor, and third, a different approach around technology. So to kind of pick at those things really quickly, first on the business model side, this is a really important differentiation point for us from how things have been done and are done, generally speaking, across the industry. Typically, the nuclear business model from a reactor design perspective has involved designing a reactor to about 80% or so completion, maybe designing the power plant to something between 50% and 80% completion, and then going off and trying to license out that design to your customers, asking them to then take the baton, to then complete the design, to then permit it, decide it, to build it, to own it, and to operate the plant. That puts all of the burden on the customers, and it's a highly frictional process. We found that people really wanted the wonderful attributes that nuclear power affords, so we decided to take a different approach. So early on, we took a view of asking the question. What would make it easier for people to buy what they really liked about nuclear technology? In other words, how could we make it easier for people to buy what they wanted? And so that led us to ultimately follow into an opportunity that's built on what renewables had done very well for a long time, which was to design, build, and operate the plant ourselves, and then just sell the power through power purchase agreements. That has significant benefits because it's aligned with what customers want, perhaps that's the most important thing, and we see that reflected in how our customer interest and customer order book has grown and is growing. Additionally, we also see reflected in the significant benefits that come to the company with this kind of recurring revenue model. And so those things are significantly enabling and accelerative to us as we think about how the future of nuclear needs to ultimately evolve. Additionally, we wanted to take a different angle on size. We didn't want to start at bigger size ranges like a few hundred megawatts or even a gigawatt like today's plant. Instead, we wanted to start as small as we reasonably could so that we could have a technology that could service a market of reasonable size and grow into, so not so small that it's kind of like a toy or niche system like a few hundred kilowatts or so, but actually big enough so that you can service a large market and grow into it. So we found a sweet spot at about 15 megawatts and that's allowed us to change the paradigm from needing billions of dollars to capitalize the plant and get it operational to only needing a few hundred million dollars. So that's allowed us to significantly change the paradigm to how you take new technologies to market. And finally, we took the approach on pursuing what we see as the best-in-class economic potential from a technological perspective. Specifically, we're working on what's called a liquid sodium cooled fast reactor technology. That means we use liquid sodium as the coolant. We do that because it's a technology that has a huge amount of potential with a really rich history of development behind it. As a society, we've built and operated more than 25 of these plants around the world. We've gained over 400 combined reactor years of operational experience. We've learned what works, what doesn't work, and we know how to take the technology ultimately into the market. In the U.S., we notably pursued a pathway of ultimately developing and demonstrating this technology in two meaningful ways, so in two plans. One was a plant in Washington State called the Fast Flux Test Facility, and the other was a plant in Idaho called EBR-II. At Oklo, we most directly build our lineage and legacy of the EBR-II plant, which was a just under 20 megawatt fast reactor that sold power to the grid, ran for about 30 years, demonstrated superior operating characteristics to its temporary commercial light water plant at the time, while also demonstrating the amazing features it had from an inherent and passive safety perspective that can afford plant design simplification and therefore cost reduction, as well as the ability to recycle fuel. Altogether, these are significant enabling benefits. We like sodium because it operates at high temperatures without being pressurized. It's compatible with common alloys. It allows us to tap into existing value and supply chains. And from there, we have the ability to leverage a technology that ultimately has best-of-breed economic potential in our eyes. Not only are we building on a mature technology base that's behind it, the Nuclear Regulatory Commission has had experience in sodium fast reactors. We also have peers in this space that are developing sodium fast reactors, like TerraPower, who's developing a sodium fast reactor but at a larger size. The progress made by them, the progress made by us, all gives us a pretty clear line of sight for how the NRC can review and evaluate sodium fast reactor technologies. And it has a long history of technology development and technology maturity behind it. A fun little fact is most people often talk about advanced reactors or Gen 4 reactors that's going to be milestones of the first one to do some milestone coming up. The reality is the first reactor that actually produced usable electricity in the United States was a liquid metal-cooled fast reactor named EBR-I. It was the earlier predecessor of EBR-II. And it first produced usable electric power back in 1951. So we're ultimately at Oklo very excited to build up on the legacy of this technology and stand on the shoulders of the giants who came before us that developed it to the spot where we can now move this technology forward. So specifically, we're implementing this in what we refer to as our product offering of the Aurora. The Aurora product line is designed to scale to 15 and 50 megawatt offerings today. And we're also evaluating 100 megawatt or larger offering that we're developing. The core focus of the business at this point is developing the 15 and 50 megawatt plants. They look very similar. They share the same fuel types and materials and coolant types, just slightly different sizes and packaging. And we do that because we've been focused on being responsive to where customer interest and demand has been, and that's led us to these two size points to start. This technology is basically a way to make heat. So when you split an atom, you're ultimately just producing heat that then conducts through the fuel, through the structure, and then is conductively removed by the coolant. So we use sodium as that way to move the coolant from the fuel then up to ultimately boil water. You can also use this heat product directly, which often opens the door for industrial heat processes. And we operate in a temperature range, which allows us to service the vast majority of heat markets that are available today. It also has some interesting connection points for advanced cooling technologies, which I know sounds funny, but thermal driven cooling technology has a lot of promise, especially for scaling data centers. Technologies like absorption chilling has some significant upside in the data center markets. And we're pretty excited about how that can integrate with our system. Aurora powerhouses are designed to maximize the use of materials, parts, and labor from non-nuclear supply chains. We develop and design this technology in a way to take advantage of these benefits because sodium gives us the ability to operate at high temperatures without being pressurized. It's compatible with commonly available alloys like stainless steel alloys, such as 316L and 304L, and form factors that are similar or identical to components available in other industries, such as oil and gas or food and beverage or chemical. That's great because we can then tap into existing value and supply chains to ultimately deliver these systems. The ability to utilize existing supply chain components allows us to leverage non-nuclear supply chains, which operate at much higher volumes and offer more diverse options that come at lower cost. This approach significantly enhances the economic scalability of our technology. And that's one of the reasons we're so excited about is economic potential. By leveraging the energy density of fission, Oklo's Aurora powerhouses have immense environmental benefits, that creates a pretty favorable technology platform that looks quite a bit different than what nuclear's been used to looking like, if you will. And that was a big focus of ours. We wanted to focus on something that has aesthetic appeal while also offering something that has functional benefits from a constructability perspective. So because of those benefits, the nuclear sector is receiving unprecedented support from all levels of government. This quarter has seen some pretty exciting developments, including the signing of the Advance Act, but this builds on years of significant support at a federal, at a state, and an international level. One of the big benefits legislatively for nuclear, frankly, one of the biggest in the last few decades was the passage and signing of the Advance Act. And that just happened within the last few months. This is a significant piece of legislation that drives forward support for Congress and also support from this administration that has clearly been in favor of propelling and advancing nuclear technology. It brings forward several major legislative developments and policy support levels to basically support and scale the deployment of nuclear. This includes enhancing and modernizing NRC licensing and review timelines, as well as fee structures, but also supports driving forward accelerated deployment models, creating opportunities to enhance demand signals and demand indicators from the government, as well as aligning the NRC mission towards more successful and efficient scaling of nuclear technology. There's a lot more we can talk about what the ADVANCE Act does, and we will continue to do so, but we're quite excited about what this positions the industry to be able to actually do and drive forward the deployment of new technologies going forward. Oklo is one of the most extensive regulatory engagement histories with the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, or the NRC. Accordingly, we find ourselves very well-positioned to benefit as an early mover with the regulatory side. We've been the longest engaged non-light water reactor company with the NRC, dating back to starting to work with them back in 2016. We've had several significant milestones along the path there, and are positioning ourselves to do a pre-application readiness assessment later this year, spanning into submitting our next application early in the next year, followed by subsequent applications thereafter. Oklo's integrated build, own, and operate business model enables an integrated and streamlined licensing pathway that's a bit different from what the industry does otherwise. An important feature for our business model, as well as our licensing plan, is taking advantage of a regulatory approach that allows us to do all the licensing we need to do to get a commercial operating license in one step. In other words, you can take a lot of steps to get to what you ultimately need, which is a commercial operating license. And some of our peers are taking a process where they go apply and get a construction permit. After that, they can go build the plan and then apply to get an operating license, after which, if they get the operating license, they can then commercially operate the plan. Others are taking an approach where instead of being the owner operator, they're designing the plans to get a design certification or something similar to that, like a standard design approval. Then after that, going out and then working with their potential customers who then need to go through the actual licensing process to get a commercial operating license themselves. So that means their customers still have to go get a commercial operating license, even if a reactor design company has a design certification, because that's only a piece of what you ultimately need to get a commercial license. And it's not needed to get a commercial license. So the design certification is not regulatory approval, but it's a step towards ultimately submitting application that you're asking your customers to do to get that license. For us, we don't do any of that. We just go straight to the combined license approach. This is largely because of what we're doing on a business model side. We're owning these plans. We're not just trying to sell the designs or license off the design. So that means you go straight into licensing and allows us to build an operator plan, which then sets the stage for us to then pursue this one step licensing process and have the benefits of repeatability that this framework allows. One really important thing that's been developed in the past when they were developing these regulatory frameworks was the ability to subsequently license additional plans in an expedited and more efficient manner. What that means is that after you've licensed your first plan, you get a combined license for that first plan that becomes your reference license. Then every license you submit thereafter becomes a subsequent license. In other terms, your reference license becomes your reference combined license and then your subsequent license because you're subsequently combined licenses. That benefits us because the subsequent reviews on the subsequent license applications are only focusing on the things that have changed from the reference application that has significant benefits in terms of accelerating and reducing review timelines, while also allowing us to scale rapidly and to follow on plans. So on the design side, our product roadmap includes three reactor sizes to meet customer needs based on what we're seeing in the customer market. And that spans megawatt to gigawatt scale deployments. What's great about this is it also positions us to have the benefits of spanning across a bunch of different markets according to these size offerings. We've long known that there's not a one size fits all design in this space. Instead, we wanted to start as small as we could for the aforementioned benefits, but then have a pathway to scale using the same technology. So we are currently offering a 15 megawatt and a 50 megawatt plan, and are also developing a 100 to 200 megawatt plan as well. These are all very similar looking technologies as we scale up, but just slightly bigger from a physical footprint. We are targeting 15 and 50 megawatt ranges to start because based on the feedback we've seen from our customers, that's a really great size range to be in to meet their needs. The numbers are very large around the opportunities to service some of these customers in these markets, especially with what our business model is, which is designing and owning and operating these plants and selling power to the direct customers. So when we talk about providing power directly to energy users, these sizes offer a good entry point to a number of different markets, and these projects can be quite large when they aggregate together. The reality too is that data centers are making up a vast majority of the market opportunity we see in front of us. While the numbers are very large around those opportunities, especially around the larger scale AI purpose data centers, these projects are not being deployed all at once at a one gigawatt or multi-gigawatt scale. Instead, they're ramping into it. It's phased growth through a development process. When you're talking about these facilities as they grow up, they also need to have the ability to have power that meets their needs, which in other words is something that is always on and with a high availability and high reliability. That means they need to have something that offers them that kind of NPlus of one generation footprint so that they are more or less confident to get the energy when they need it and how they need it. In other words, you're going to build more power capacity as you ramp up with your customers, which is a really exciting thing for us, given our size, we're uniquely positioned to do it, but it also allows us to grow with them as they build out their overall footprint and they meet their customer needs and therefore need more energy as that goes forward. The important thing about this too, just to emphasize this one more time, is that we can build up to match where our customers are going as they grow their order book and their demand in a phased way, while also building an extra reactor that is providing power on standby for them when they need it because at the end of the day, we have to take some of our plants offline every once in a while to service them or refuel them. That means we can deliver that full freight power solution for our customers and do so in a way that's economically attractive because we're not too large to do so. So our size is really in that sweet spot that matches very well with both the growth and the NPlus 1 requirements that our data center customers have. And to dive a bit deeper on the data center side, one of the things that stood out to us in our engagement with potential customers is learning about what their energy needs really look like. We're finding that a data center, a data center campus is often made up of a number of data halls, as we like to call them. Those data halls are whatever built out kind of in building block fashion to fill out an ultimate facility or a campus. We're finding that most of the data halls today that are being planned are planned to consume between 35 and maybe 50 megawatts each. So each company has a different architectures and different approaches, but we're seeing that there's a significant amount of upside and opportunity around where those data halls are. We also see some development that's on the smaller size, power chunks between 10 and 20 megawatts. So at the end of the day, that gives us a really good position in the market to service in different range of power levels. So in summary, when we think about our sites and our project opportunities, we're matching very well with how we see data center markets and other industrial markets developing. As we look at the market today, based on the conversations we have with our partners and customers, we see that the ranges of power needed on a site-by-site or project-by-project, or even sort of data centered phase development project basis. They're typically looking at needing power between 10 and 20 or between 30 and 50 megawatt chunks while also needing that high reliability of power. Our ability to scale with them means we're really well positioned to build up. This position is quite differently than if you were to go in and say, let's build one plant to provide all the power for a facility. That's been hard to offer an NPlus 1 dynamic because you would significantly have to overbuild your capacity. So in this illustration, if you had a 500 megawatt project, to build two 500 megawatt projects to provide NPlus 1, that would be a lot of stranded capacity. Whereas for 500 megawatt projects, we could build 10, 15 megawatt plants within an additional 50 megawatt plant. So 11 total to offer that NPlus 1 reliability while also offering the same amount of power. Additionally, as customers build out, they're probably going to need 500 megawatts all at once. They're going to need it over time. And that time might be a ramp up of two or five or more years. So they might start by needing 50 and then 100 and then 250 and then 500 megawatts in total as they scale forward. Well, that's great because we can build up and match that with them. That also gives us the benefits of ordering parts for the reactor and components for the reactor in volume, just to meet one project, very different dynamic than building one plant to purposely fill that. And if you built that 500 megawatt plant to fill that demand, you'd have a lot of stranded capacity while your customer would ramp up. That challenges some of the economics accordingly. So our model really works well to match where we see data center development moving, as well as other industrial users and other power users. So with that, I'll go ahead and hand off to our CFO, Craig, who's going to take it over and talk to you about our business model. Craig.