Thank you, Lucas. As Lucas stated, we had a tremendous quarter of revenue growth, margin expansion and adjusted EBITDA improvement. Total revenue for the quarter was $65 million up 74% from Q1 2022 and up 60% sequentially from Q4. This shatters our previous quarterly record of $47 million and demonstrates our ability to scale and diversify the business. Unlike the past few quarters, this quarter was substantially free from supply chain constraints, labor volatility and other external factors that temporarily hampered our business. It was a quarter in which we were able to continue to build the business and improve operating efficiency without external headwinds. All three revenue streams grew during the quarter. Hardware increased nearly $20 million, professional services by $4 million and hosted services by nearly $1 million combining for more than a $24 million sequential increase. A full quarter of new revenue recognition for hubs combined with sales of more IoT devices like locks, thermostats and sensors increased ARPU for smart home package. Non-IoT hardware including access control and Alloy SmartHome Access also contributed as we continue to fulfill the backlog we experienced from previous supply chain constraints. Professional services revenue grew from $9 million to $13 million due to higher unit volume and increased ARPU from a favorable customer mix. The growth in hosted services is solely attributable to SaaS revenue. SaaS revenue increased 11% sequentially pushing SaaS ARR to $36 million up from $32 million last quarter. SaaS ARPU for all products for the quarter increased from $5.12 to $5.21, a 2% increase sequentially. SaaS ARPU for Booked Units was $5.40 a 23% improvement sequentially from $4.39 the previous quarter. Total Units Deployed at the end of the quarter was 602,000 as we deployed 55000 units during the quarter a 29% increase from Q4 of 2022. Booked Units for the quarter was 65000 units and total bookings were $37 million. The three revenue streams hardware, professional services and hosted services not only set records in revenue, but combined for a record $9 million in gross profit. This more than doubled the $4 million from last quarter with hardware and professional services increasing more than $2 million each and SaaS almost $1 million. Total gross margin increased from 10% to 14%, a four percentage point increase as efficiencies and economies of scale drove improved margin. Hardware and professional services revenue streams are particularly subject to quarter-to-quarter fluctuations because of the customer and product mix in the quarter. Hardware margins this quarter, declined slightly from 15% to 13%, because of a high volume of third-party products, which offset margin improvement from a full quarter of recognizing hub revenue. Professional services gross margin, demonstrated the greatest improvement as gross margin losses of 81% were half to 38%. In addition to ARPU growth, we have been focused on streamlining processes to enhance performance velocity and productivity of the implementation process. We are continually revisiting our operational processes and are tweaking them to deliver our services better, faster, more efficiently and more accurately, oftentimes with the help of technology. These changes are starting to positively impact professional services margins. While we expect both hardware and professional services margins to continue to improve over time, we do not expect the rate of improvement to be linear. Hosted services gross margin on the other hand, continues to show steady growth, improving sequentially from 60% to 62%. As hubs are no longer added to this revenue stream, hosted services will gradually be weighted more towards SaaS revenue. To provide better visibility into our SaaS gross margin, we will be sharing a new metric for our business, SaaS gross margin. SaaS margin has continued to improve over the past five quarters from 32% a year ago and 70% in Q4 to 73% in Q1. We believe this will continue to improve incrementally as we continue to gain scale and seek further efficiencies. Operating expenses decreased from $26 million last quarter to $24 million, a decrease of 7% sequentially. R&D expenses decreased slightly, while sales and marketing expenses increased, as we continue to balance our growth and profitability objectives. We achieved substantial efficiency gains through improved processes and technology initiatives, resulting in a headcount reduction of about 10% company-wide. This contributed to a reduction in general and administrative expenses by approximately $2 million in the quarter. By simultaneously growing revenue, improving gross margin and reducing operating expenses, adjusted EBITDA improved significantly from negative $14 million last quarter to negative $8.5 million. We continue to execute on our path to reach intra-quarter profitability on an adjusted EBITDA basis. We ended the quarter with a cash balance of $204 million, which is ample liquidity to fund our working capital requirements. Our cash burn from ongoing operations in Q1 excluding any acquisition-related payments was nearly half of our average quarterly burn in 2022. Especially in times of macroeconomic changes, we have been intentional in minimizing cash burn, not only from operations, but by enhancing cash management financial discipline and balance sheet optimization, which shows in our lower accounts receivable and inventory balances, despite higher revenues. As previously mentioned, Q1 was a phenomenal quarter of improvements in unit economics, efficiencies and velocity, that led to record growth and improved profitability. While we believe we can sustain meaningful top line growth, while narrowing the adjusted EBITDA loss, timing differences may lead to some quarter-to-quarter variability. Our Q2 guidance for revenue is $50 million to $55 million and adjusted EBITDA is negative $7 million to negative $3 million. We reaffirm our 2023 full year guidance for revenue of $225 million to $250 million and adjusted EBITDA of negative $25 million to negative $15 million. I will now pass the call back to Lucas for closing remarks.