Thanks, John. The traceability initiative is really accelerating. It already far exceeded the expectations that we had, both in terms of the size of the market and the pace at which the market is embracing it. We originally thought that as FDA rule 204 rolled out, it might cover as many as a total of, say, 6,000 to 10,000 suppliers and that we would get many or most of those ultimately into the network over a period of time. We were wrong. We are likely to have nearly 10,000 suppliers in our queue by the end of this fiscal year in June. Incidentally, by queue, we mean suppliers for retailers and wholesalers who are or will be mandated by their customers to use the traceability network. In case you're wondering, the slippage from what we call queue to ultimate revenue is typically not significant. In terms of timing, we originally thought the industry adoption would be tied to the FDA deadline in 2026. Again, we were wrong. Retailers are blown right past that deadline and are driving adoption at an accelerated pace right now, both from the scope of suppliers covered, as well as the deadline for being traceability ready. What happened was that several large retailers and wholesalers concluded that they could not easily run multiple processes in their business for Rule 204 foods versus other kinds of foods from a purely operational perspective. The result is that these large retailers and wholesalers are now requiring all foods not just the narrow list from the FDA must conform to the traceability standards that they've set. That means that market competitive forces are now taking over from FDA mandated forces to drive traceability across the industry. In short, we're not just dealing with the narrow FDA list anymore but all foods increasingly both the total size of the market and the speed of adoption. Today, traceability revenue represents about 5% of our annual recurring revenue. That's about $1 million a year. This $1 million reflects the small proportion of suppliers in our Q have already been onboarded provided the necessary data and now are being billed. I'll talk about the onboarding process more in a minute. But the point is that the opportunity in hand in the queue from suppliers tied to retailers who have already selected us is many times larger than our current traceability revenue. We said track and trace would double the revenue of the company over the next 2 years or so. In view of what we see now, we certainly stand by that. In spite of this market-driven pressure at retail and wholesale, however, traceability awareness among suppliers is actually relatively low still, surprisingly low, actually. That's one of the reasons we're putting out as many press releases as we are. We have also had to increase our sales and marketing staff to reach out to each impacted supplier, often several times, to explain the rules explain how they're impacted and help them gather the necessary information to comply. This isn't easy and it's an inherently time-consuming process but it's essential. In the long run note, actually helps us gain thought leadership with these thousands of suppliers that we're bringing into the network. Remember, just a few months ago, we thought by June, we would have a queue of suppliers that could increase our revenue by $3 million to $4 million per year when they were onboarded. We now think that number could be as much as $20 million when onboarding is completed, again, over the next couple of years. Obviously, this can't become revenue all at once. In fact, we're focused on automating every aspect of the process that we can and we're getting better and better and faster and faster at it. The fact is, however, learning the right automation techniques is time dependent, not number of personnel dependent. Nine women remember in the room for a month do not make a baby. Once onboarded, our systems make end-to-end traceability pretty simple. But perhaps you wonder why it's likely to take that long. Well, there's a number of steps in what we're calling the onboarding process. It's a sequence of steps, not a single step. First, we work with the hub, meaning the retailer, a large wholesaler to determine what suppliers need to be added and in what order we should do that for them. From there, we work with each of the suppliers to understand the products they produce, the shipment destinations, the quantities, facilities, et cetera. And along the way, we're educating the supplier about traceability, the rules involved and why it's important. Many suppliers in fact, thought they were exempt. We don't do soft cheeses or seafood. But when they learn that their largest customer, perhaps several of their largest customers are mandating traceability, even if their products are not on the FDA list, it's a wake-up call. The sheer number of suppliers is one challenge but that's actually the smallest challenge. Each supplier is unique. There's no standardization of data collection. There's language issues. Some don't have much in the way of computers. In fact, 70% of the suppliers don't even have an IT department. Some data is collected and files others scribbled on a legal path. We have to navigate all of that, helping the supplier understand what data is required, when we have to get it and sending them up in our platform. Next, after identifying contacting the suppliers, we move to what we call the technical setup for onboarding. We have to determine where each supplier stores their critical tracking elements and KDE that are required by the regulation. We have to understand what systems the supplier uses and where those elements reside. Next, we assist the supplier in determining how to extract those critical data elements and then transmit them to us each time there's a shipment. Finally, we work with the supplier on their preferred form of data transmission, sort of wash rent, repeat. We have to do this many times, with every supplier encountering specific challenges to each supplier and we have to do this to determine how to best automate the process. And by the way, if there were a competitive start-up with no experience in dealing with food suppliers like this, it's certain to be derailed. What we've been doing for years is just this. It's one of our greatest competitive advantages. It's also important to remember, we already have tens of thousand suppliers with whom we have a customer relationship from our compliance work. As we are now climbing the onboarding mountain, we're also continuing to add to our very large sales pipeline. What we're seeing here is even though the retailers and wholesalers we have committed today will bring as many as 10,000 suppliers into the network. We will be bringing on more and more suppliers from the retailers and wholesalers that are in our queue. The result is that the 10,000 is really not the end but closer to the beginning of what we see for traceability. Obviously, it will take time for that opportunity to fully translate to recurring revenue but it's going to happen. Scaling like this is not new for us at least, what's new for us is simply the specific FDA requirements, competition. It's important to remember that most suppliers will end up with more than one system. So it turns out most everyone, we believe, will use the network that we've created, the ReposiTrak Traceability Network as a base system and use other labeling and marketing systems on top of our solution. The great news is that we've positioned ourselves with both our technology and our business model and pricing to be the core traceability solution to the market. Market share is important, honestly but it's not critical. We have and will continue to spend carefully on sales and marketing to support the RTN as we call it and we'll do whatever is necessary to stay on our customer-centric position. When our customers are successful, they will buy more from us. We know that. It's our foundational belief. And we're not stopping at traceability. In point of fact, we already have a number of exciting product additions that will follow on and to amplify the value of our traceability solution. We're already seeing a lot of interest in these follow-on applications from our customers. So today, traceability tomorrow much, much more. While we're laser-focused on traceability, our compliance and supply chain businesses also continue to grow and generate increased cash flow. Even today, our annual recurring revenue covers close to twice our fixed costs supporting a pretty robust return of capital to shareholders. And keep in mind, we have deprioritized certain high-touch low opportunity revenue engagement more or less 1 million over the last 24 months but simultaneously grown our annual recurring revenue, growing GAAP net income even more, growing earnings per share even faster and expanded our cash generation. Traceability will do this even faster for us going forward. So let me summarize. One, we're going to continue to take great care of our customers. Two, we will continue to deploy our capital allocation strategy buying back stock, both common and preferred, paying the dividend and growing our cash balance. As we did last year, the board will periodically review the capital allocation strategy. Adjusting the dividend and other levers we have based on our cash generation earnings per share, just as they did with the dividend in November of 2023. As our results grow, we expect to increase the dividend at the same time, continuing to add cash to the balance sheet, further reinforcing our financial position. Three, we are maintaining a fortress balance sheet with nearly $25 million in cash, no debt even after the last few years of buying back over 2 million shares of common stock, paying off $6 million in bank and other debt and redeeming the preferred and pay not a cash dividend. Hopefully, you can hear how optimistic in fact, confident that I am. And with that, let's open it up now for questions. Operator?