(Operator instructions). Now I would like to introduce Ms. Blair Christie, Senior Vice President of Corporate Communications for Cisco Systems, ma’am you may begin. Blair Christie - SVP of Corporate Communications: Than you Kim, and good afternoon everyone, welcome to our 75th quarterly conference call. This is Blair Christie, and I’m joined by John Chambers, our Chairman and CE0, Frank Calderoni, Chief Financial Officer, Rick Justice, Executive Vice President of Worldwide Operations and Business Development, as well as Ned Hooper, Senior Vice President of Corporate Development and Consumer Groups, and Rob Lloyd, Senior Vice President of Sales for US, Canada, and Japan. The Q1 fiscal year 2009 press release is on full national market wire and the European Financial and Technology Wire, and on the Cisco website at www.cisco.com. I would like to remind you that we have a corresponding webcast with slides. In those slides you will find the financial information we cover during this conference call, as well as additional financial metrix and analysis that you may find helpful. Additionally, downloadable Q1 financial statements will be available following the call, including revenue segments by product and geography, income statements, full GAAP to non GAAP reconciliation information, balance sheets, and cash flow statements can be found on our website in the Investor Relations section. Click on the financial section of the website to access the webcast slides and these documents. A replay of this call will be available via telephone from November 5 through November 12 at 866-3574205 or 203-369-0122 for international callers. It is also available from November 5th through January 16th on Cisco’s investor relations website at www.cisco.com/go/investors. Throughout this call we will be referencing both GAAP and non GAAP financial results, as is customary with many companies, we have used this Q1 time period to reflect certain immaterial reclassifications to our financial statements and results, which will also be reflecting in our Form 10-Q. The financial results in the press release are unaudited. The matters we will be discussing today include forward looking statements, and as such as subject to the risks and uncertainties that we discussed in detail in our documents filed with the SEC. specifically, the most recent annual report on Form 10-K and any applicable amendments which identify important risk factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from those contained in the forward looking statements. Unauthorized recording of this conference call is not permitted, and I will now turn it over to John for his commentary on the quarter, John. John Chambers - Chairman and CEO: Thank you Blair. During the opening comments of the conference call, I will focus on what I view to be the key takeaways for Q1 fiscal year ’09. an update on why we continue to be comfortable with our long term growth goals of 12 to 17%, assuming that the global economy returns to normal growth rates, a very candid discussion about what we are seeing in the market on global basis relative to Q1, and its effect on our Q2 expectations, then finally our revenue guidance for Q2, with the appropriate caveats. Frank will follow these opening comments with additional detail on Q1 fiscal year 2009. The third section of the call will focus on business momentum and strategy from a geographic, product, customer statement perspective, Frank will them follow with additional financial parameter around our guidance. I will then wrap it up with some comments in terms of Cisco’s momentum going into Q2, and finally our Q&A session. Q1FY2009 was a solid quarter for Cisco from a revenue and an earnings per share perspective, especially given the many challenges that we are all seeing occur in the global marketplace. In terms of those areas that we can control or influence, we continue to feel very comfortable with both our progress in the quarter and our long term vision and differentiative strategy as we move into new market adjacencies. We exit Q1 with an extremely strong position in the marketplace, approximately 27 billion in cash and investments, solid balance from the product, geographic, and customer segments perspective, perhaps one of the broadest balances across the IT industry. Continued success in being the number one and number two player in most of our 20 plus targeted product areas, and innovation engine that results in product leadership across the broadest range of products that we’ve had in our history, combined with our product pipeline of new innovations that we believe is also the strongest that we have ever had. Not only does our end to end technology architecture, form the device to the data center across any combination of networks, but also of next generation of entertainment and business models. So we have had what we believe to be the strongest position in terms of customer relationships at the enterprise and service provider level, and helping to enable our customers’ business goals. Just as we led in the first phase of the internet, i.e. Web 1.0, from both the internal utilization and the expertise we offer our customers to enable this capability, we believe we are now uniquely positioned to provide very similar leadership in the second phase of the internet, through collaboration, enabled by Network Web 2.0 technologies. Once again, we are leading in our terms of our own utilization and partnering with our customers to drive their goals, a changing business model enabled by the network. Now moving on to a summary of our Q1 financials, we were pleased with the following results. Revenue was $10.3 billion, approximately an 8% year over year increase. Pace generated from operations was $2.7 billion. Non-GAAP earnings per share were $.42, a 5% year over year increase and GAAP earnings per share were $.37, a 6% year over year increase. Total non-GAAP gross margins were very solid at 65.6, an increase from 64.9% last quarter. Non-GAAP operating expenses are a percentage of revenues for Q1 with 35.8%. We continue to drive innovation and product leadership from our core, advanced and emerging technologies. The following is a summary of each of those areas for Q1 in terms of year over year product revenue growth. Core technologies and services were solid with switching growing at 8% year over year, routing growing at 1% and service revenues growing at 10% year over year. Our first wave of advanced technologies grew 15% year over year, unified communications within that group grew at 22%, wireless grew at 21%, security grew at 19%, the network home decreased 2% and storage decreased 4%. Our second phase of advanced technologies had a very strong quarter with revenue growth year over year of 22%. Application networking services grew 25% and video systems grew 21%. Our early stage internal start-ups that we call “Emerging Technologies” were also solid in Q1 in terms of year over year order growth. Our strategy is to develop a reasonable percentage of these emerging technologies into what we categorize as advanced technologies, with a realistic probability of becoming 1 billion plus in sales and the number 1 market position in their respective product categories. Overall progress was again, very strong in this quarter. While these numbers are not material financially at this point in time, we believe that with proper execution they can become very significant to our long term growth rates in the longer run. The emerging technology group orders in total grew approximately 180% year over year. We had strong year over year order growth from the mid teens to the low thirties in the following countries: China, Canada, Japan, Russia. While we find some of our largest countries such as the US, UK and Italy with negative order growth year over year in Q1. We provide additional details on geographies and customer segments later in the conference call. In summary, for those areas that we can control and influence, we feel that we are doing reasonably well. The key market transitions relative to collaboration and digital networking, which will drive productivity for the next decade are evolving even faster than we thought one quarter ago. However, all of us are seeing the same financial and global economic challenges that have occurred over this last quarter, especially in the month of October. At this point in time, I would like to share with you some of the detail about how we will approach the current challenges and our underlying assumptions regarding our short term strategy by taking these challenges into consideration. First, we start with a culture and track record of using economic challenges to gain market share and profit share and move into new market adjacencies. Our long term growth goals, assuming reasonable global balance and GDP growth have not changed and will remain in the 12-17% range. Third, it was one year ago when Cisco was among the first to indicated we were seeing some challenges in orders from our US financial and global accounts. We do believe that these challenges we have seen in the US have expanded to Europe, as well as many of the emerging market countries and finally into Asia. But if there is one lesson learned during the proceeding economic challenges that Cisco faced in 1993, 1997, 2001 and 2003, is the importance of taking action early when you have long term objectives. We also want to use this call, as we have done in the past, to share very transparently what we are seeing in terms of order momentum and feedback from our customers, with the appropriate caveat that we could be wrong in our assumptions and strategies. Our approach to all of the economic slowdowns that have occurred over the last two decades has remained very similar. We will follow this approach in dealing with the current challenges. When we see these market transitions occurring, we go through our playbook, if you will, for economic downturns where there are four basic guidelines that we follow. The first is to determine if it is the macro-environment or your strategy. Candidly determine if the slowing of your business is due primarily to market forces, and that your strategy is working well or was your challenge largely self-inflicted? If your strategy was working well, stay focused on its implementation. Second, length and depth of a downturn – determine the magnitude of the slowdown and your best estimate on the length and depth of the slowdown, then adjust and realign your asset utilization appropriately. Third, prepare for the upturn. Start preparing as soon as possible for the upturn and how you are going to gain share and differentiate yourself from your peers as it relates to profitable growth. Fourth, expand customer relationships. Use the slowdown to take advantage of building even stronger relationships and differentiation with your customers. Just as we’ve done in prior challenges, we will also implement our game plan or action plan, if you will, for dealing with these challenges while following our playbook with the four basic guidelines outlined above. The game plan for the current downturn will have six major points and will be called our six-point plan. Point one of the plan is our vision, strategy and execution model and it’s the fabric for implementation success. First, we believe our vision of how the industry will evolve is being driven by the increasing role intelligent networks will play as all forms of communications and IP are enabled by the networks. This transition is occurring as we expected. Our differentiated strategy enabled by the network collaboration is allowing us to move into market adjacencies with tremendous speed, scale and flexibility. Cisco will remain focused on both the technology and business architectures to enable our customer’s objectives. In short, our vision, strategy and execution approach is working well and we plan to stay focused on continuing to expand this approach. Second, collaboration Web 2.0 driving the future growth and productivity – we will continue our rapid expansion of collaborative technologies and new business models in both our product architectures and our own internal IP implementation. We plan to quickly realign resources to focus on over two dozen market adjacencies that will loosely, then tightly, come together with our core technologies, and we will be the best example of using Web 2.0 technology such as telepresence, WebX, Wiki, slogs, discussion forums, C-visions, widgets, etcetera, in an architectural process driven approach that drives productivity and new business models. Third, resource management and realignment – through our counsels and board structures, we have already realigned over 500 million of resources through these opportunities. Beginning in Q2, our goal is to realign another 500 million of resources while at the same time reducing our expenses for fiscal year ’09 over 1 billion from our original budget. Our goal is to achieve these changes by the end of Q4 of fiscal year 2009. This includes a pause in hiring as well as reductions in travel, off-sites, outside services, equipment, events, prototypes, marketing and other activities. Fourth, we intend to be aggressive in our strategy, prioritize and then execute. We will also be bold in taking good business risk during this downturn to build on market transitions, opportunities and put our many assets to use in existing and new markets as the recovery occurs. We will prioritize the top 5 objectives of both the company and then each of our counsels and boards. The top 5 objectives for the company are: next generation company and next generation relationships, what we call Cisco 3.0 and rob your leading course. Second - collaboration/web 2.0. Third - data center virtualization. F Fourth - video, and fifth, globalization. We will then align our resources to these top priorities, both as a company and within each of the counsels and boards. Fifth - investment in the US and selective emerging countries. We intend to invest aggressively in two geographic areas – the US and selective emerging countries. In our opinion, the US will be the first major country to recover. Therefore, we will make many of our market adjustments in the US. On the other hand, we believe countries like China and India are the best positioned among their emerging country peers to minimize the effect of global challenges on their own economy. We are also optimistic that we will continue to see strong support by many governments around the world to minimize the effects of these major changes. Also, built into our assumption is the view that many companies will use network technology for innovation, productivity, speed and skill, both during the downturn and positioning for the upturn. The strategy on emerging countries is simple – over time we expect the majority of the world’s GDP with come from these emerging countries. In expanding these relationships during tough times, our goal is to be uniquely positioned as the market turn around occurs. This is identical to what we did in the Asia 1997 financial crisis. And sixth, the power of the network as a platform, driving the future of communications and IT. Finally, we will remain focused on our stressed goal of evolving into the top communications and IT company, which will be enabled by the expanding role of intelligent networks. This could be the definition of a very success implementation of our six-point plan, looking three to four years out, after the inevitable upturn occurs. Now at this time, I would like to give you some additional data and customer feedback for you to understand why we are moving rapidly to realign our call structure after a solid Q1, fiscal 2009. There were a number of positives in the quarter, such as our financial results, balance product revenue growth, advanced technology growth and solid momentum from some of our developed and emerging geography such as Latin America, China, Germany, Japan, Canada and Russia. There were, however, even more challenges from an order perspective as well as global customer feedback on the health of their businesses, especially in the US and western Europe. Over 70% of our business comes from the US and western Europe today. Both experienced negative year over year order growth in Q1. We are seeing customers, not just in the financial, automotive or retail sectors, but across most of our enterprise industries facing what they view as a very challenging business environment. This started in the US, it then in our opinion, expanded to Europe, then to emerging market theater, and now to Asia. Total year over year product order growth varied dramatically during the quarter from August to October. In August our order growth increased by 7% year over year, while in October our order growth decreased by 9% year over year. Overall for Q1 year over year product order growth decreased by 3%. While revenue growth in Q1 was a solid 8%, book to bill was below 1. In summary, we were one of the first high-tech companies to report our quarter that included October. These challenges that we saw in the US did spread globally in our opinion. The environment has changed dramatically in the last two months, with the financial crisis in September and the economic crisis becoming more apparent on a global basis in October. Cisco is uniquely compared to many of our peers in that approximately 84% of our business is non-recurring each quarter, and therefore is a good indicator of new spending patterns. Also, our balance across all major geographic areas, four major customer segments, and over two dozen product families normally works to our advantage. But when you are the number one player in many of these categories and the slowdown has truly gone global across all of these industry segments, geographies and product families, we will be impacted. It is very difficult, given all of the uncertainties going on in the market to provide a forecast, give the dramatic variability and it is probably the second most difficult time in my career in terms of my comfort level with the forecast. It would not be a major surprise to see these numbers vary on either the positive or negative side of revenue guidance that we provided for Q2. In providing our revenue guidance for Q2 fiscal year ’09, we are going to assume that what we saw in October in terms of order momentum challenges will continue into the next quarter. This is also what we are hearing from our global customers as our field rolls out their forecast for Q2. As we have said in conference calls over many years, Cisco will always be affected by major economic changes, capital spending patterns, new and existing competitors and our ability to execute or not on our strategy and other factors, as discussed in our SEC reports. For the purpose of our long range goals, as well as our quarterly guidance, we are also exploring our vision of how the market will evolve will be accurate and will be effectively, and we will effectively execute on that vision. With this in mind our revenue guidance for fiscal Q2 2009 including our usual caveat as discussed earlier in our financial report is for revenue to decrease in the 5 to 10% range year over year. Again as a reminder during each of the past second economic slowdown Cisco has always navigated through them very effectively. We did this in 1993, 1997, 2001, 2003, and each scenario we gained both wallet share and in my opinion profit share. As a result we were better positioned coming out of these transitions versus our peers. We will also to continue to be aggressive in our investments in this slowdown. Cisco uses time as an opportunity to expand our share of our customers spin and we will be aggressive about moving into market adjacencies during the slowdown. As we approach with the opportunities and challenges in front of us with being a very experienced and broad leadership team, they've been through these challenges together over the last decade. We also bring a culture that adjust very quickly to change and has consistently continued to execute effectively regardless of opportunities and challenges. And as we have done before leveraging market slowdown to move into many new market adjacencies. While we all wish these challenges would not occur, it is during these times that we have consistently gained the confidence of our customers, partners, shareholders, and employees to be even stronger versus our peers following these challenges. In summary we believe that we are very well positioned in the industry from a vision, differentiated strategy, and a execution perspective. We believe we are entering the next phase of the internet as growth and productivity was in our collaboration enables by network web 2.0 technologies. We will do our best to provide the product architectures any expertise to help our customers in the implementation of these collaborative capabilities from a technology and business perspective. We will also share with our customers how we've done this internally. In short we are going to attempt to execute a strategy over the next decade, but it's similar to what we did in the early '90's. And as we said before it powered our growth for the next decade except for the obvious differences of being a company that has now at a run rate of approximately $40 billion with over 67,000 employees focused on the opportunities. Now I turn it over to you, Frank. Frank Calderoni - CFO: Thanks, John. John Chambers - Chairman and CEO: You're welcome. Frank Calderoni - CFO: As John stated earlier Cisco has a strong history of successfully navigating market transition. And I remain confident that our financial model enables us to execute in both good and tough environments. For today's call I will provide a recap of our solid financial results for the first quarter of Cisco 2009, and then I will discuss what I believe our financial strength positions us well to manage during the uncertain economic environment we saw - especially in the second half of the quarter, but also more importantly going forward. The total revenue for the first quarter was $10.3 billion, an increase of approximately 8% year over year, in line with our guidance. Searching revenue was $3.6 billion an increase of 8% year over year, driven by growth in both our modular and (unintelligible) port folio. Routing revenue was $1.9 billion up 1% year over year - against technologies revenue totaled $2.7 billion representing an increase of 17% year over year with strong performance in unified communications of 22% year over year growth. The video systems growth of approximately 21% year over year, securities with growth of approximately 19%, wireless land growth of approximately 21% and application networking services growth of approximately 25%. Other product revenue totaled $442 million, a decrease of 13% year over year - related to our obstacle and cable businesses quarter. Total service revenue was $1.7 billion up 10% year over year with solid growth in emerging markets. We are pleased with our growth and advanced services of approximately 15%. Total revenue by geography ranged from 1% year over year in the US and Canada to a high of 41% in emerging markets. Emerging markets revenue growth for the quarter were higher than the order growth rate that John reported due to some increased shipments - recognition of previously deferred revenue and the affect of our reserves from Q1 of fiscal 08. We want to remind you that revenue growth in emerging markets may experience variability and order growth may provide a better indication of future revenue performance. Q1 total non-GAAP gross margin was 65.6% up 7/10ths of a point quarter over quarter and up 4/10ths of a point year over year. For product only non-GAAP gross margin for the first quarter was 66.2% up a percentage point quarter over quarter and up 6/10ths of a point year over year. The quarter over quarter improvement was driven by higher cost savings partially offset by product mix. The year over year improvement was driven by higher cost savings partially offset by higher product discounts as well as mix. Our non-GAAP service margin for the first quarter was 62.4% down from 63.1% last quarter and 63.5% in Q1 fiscal year 08. The service margin will typically experience some variability over time due to various factors, such as the changes in mix between our technical support services and advanced services as well as the timing of support contract initiations as well as renewal. Total gross margin by geography range from 63.4% for emerging market to 69% in Japan this quarter. Across the geographies the margins have remained relatively stable over the last few quarters. Non-GAAP operating expenses as a percentage of revenue for approximately 35.8% in Q1 fiscal year 09 relatively consistent with the 35.7% we had in Q1 fiscal year 08. Foreign exchange impact for the quarter was $46 million when compared to the same period last year which added approximately 4/10ths of a point to this ratio. Excluding foreign exchange our non-GAAP operating expenses for Q1 were at 7% year over year. Interest and other income $123 million Q1 which includes the recognition of realized gains, losses, as well as impairment. We remain very pleased with our diversified high quality cash and investment port folio. I will provide more detail on investment port folio in just a few moments. Our Q1 fiscal year '09 non-GAAP tax provision rate was 22% down approximately 2 points from fiscal year '08. This decline in the affected tax rate was driven primarily by the renewal of US Federal R&D tax credits which occurred last month in a more favorable mix of foreign earnings at lower tax rates. Non-GAAP net income for the first quarter fiscal year 2009 was $2.5 billion which was flat year over year. As a reminder in Q1 fiscal year '08 we did record a onetime tax benefit of $162 million. Non-GAAP earnings per share on a fully diluted basis for the first quarter were 42 cents per share up from 40 cents per share in the first quarter of fiscal year 2008 - a 5% increase year over year and our highest earnings per share to date. The onetime tax benefit in Q1 fiscal year '08 was approximately 3 cents per share. Non-GAAP net income for the first quarter was $2.2 billion dollars flat compared to $2.2 billion dollars in the first quarter - in fiscal year 2008. GAAP net earnings per share on a fully diluted basis for the first quarter was 37 cents per share that was up from 35 cents per share in the same quarter of fiscal year 2008. Now moving onto the balance sheet - the total of cash, cash equivalent and investments at the end of Q1 was $26.8 billion up $528 million from Q4 fiscal year '08. During Q1 we generated $2.7 billion dollars in cash flow from operations as well as $224 million in proceeds from stock option exercises. For the quarter we re-purchased $1 billion of common stock or 46 million shares of our stock at an average price of $21.95 cents per share. We ended the quarter with approximately $7.4 billion remaining in the current stock re-purchasing authorization. Moving onto accounts receivable - we ended the quarter at $3.3 billion which was down 14% on Q4 fiscal year '08. At the end of Q1 days sales outstanding or our DSO was 29 days compared to 34 days in Q4 fiscal year '08 driven by lower service billing due to seasonality as well as improved collection. Total inventory at the end of Q1 was $1.2 billion that was flat quarter over quarter. Non-GAAP interim returns for 11.6 this quarter which was also flat from last quarter. Our inventory purchase commitment and the end of 2/1 were $2.9 billion up 5% from the end of Q4 fiscal year '08. Deferred revenue was $8.8 billion at the end of Q1 an increase of approximately 24% year over year. The third product revenue was $2.9 billion up approximately 18% from last year. While the third service revenue was $6 billion up approximately 28% year over year. At the end of Q1 our head count totaled 67,647 a net increase of approximately 1,518 from Q4 fiscal year '08 of which more than 50% were college hires which we normally experience in Q1 each year. Separate from our college hires we added 722 to head count this quarter which were mostly engineering, sales, and services. In mid October we did implement a pause in our external hiring while we did assess the changing macroeconomic environment. Now I'd like to discuss how we are managing Cisco Financial positions. In both good times and challenging times and why we believe this is a competitive advantage and positions us to manage our business well and continue to lead in the future. We do understand that during turbulent economic times like we are currently experiencing our investors would like a solid understanding of key areas we believe allow us to perform well. I would start by saying with nearly $27 billion in cash - cash equivalents and investments, a solid balance sheet, visibility into our supply chain, strong investment port folio management, and our fiscal capital financing arm - all of which provide a key competitive advantage we believe we are well positioned to manage our business through any type of market condition. For example, take the key items that influence our results this quarter. First, we continue to have very high quality receivables as evidence by our DSL 29 days. We continue to conduct regular assessments of the quality of our receivables given the current market conditions and we remain comfortable with our portfolio. Second, our strong supply chain management continues to be a key lever in our ability to maintain strong growth margins whilst at the same time providing visibility and management of our demand planning. Over the last several years we are significantly enhanced our supply chain capabilities to better anticipate and manage our demands. Our lean manufacturing model allows us to more fully optimize our supply chains inventory and investment. We have enhanced processes and systems to provide increased visibility inventory management and better responses to fluctuations in demand. Over time this has resulted in better lead times, on-time shipment predictability, and improved inventory management across our supply chain. While there is always inherent risk given the current economic environment we have enhanced the monitoring of our supply base to identify potential issues so that we can take appropriate measures on a timely basis. Key metrics such as inventory returns, purchase commitments, and on-going review of excess and obsolete inventory remains strong. And again contributes to Cisco's consistent margin performance. Our investment strategy has served us well in the turbulent environment. The overall credit quality of our port folio is extremely strong with our cash and fixed income port folio invested in securities with an average credit rating of double A or better. In light of more challenging market conditions over the last six months we have more conservatively managed our $27 billion diversifies port folio, which has resulted in slightly less than 1% mark to market impact on a cash, and fixed income port folio valuation compared to last quarter. Finally, our financing arm, or Cisco Capital - continues to provide financing to our customers and our channel partners, which enables incremental sales of Cisco's products, services, and networking solutions. In fiscal year '08 fiscal capital originated or facilitated approximately $4.3 billion dollars in lease and longer term loan arrangements. While the number of credit requests for enquiries has increased in the current environment we have adhered to our consistent methodology and prudent financing practices. Our thorough review process for monitoring a variety of risk metrics has enabled us to affectively balance risk reward as well as sales enablement. We believe there has been no material impact to the quality of our port folio. Broadly speaking we believe our port folio has on average an investment grade profile. We remain comfortable with the credit profile and the way we're deploying our capital. With respect to our accounting policies we remain conservative in how we account for our Cisco capital financing business. Specifically this comprises gross receivables, loan receivables, finance service contracts, and financing guarantees. To update the numbers previously disclosed like Q1 fiscal year '09 we have a combined balance sheet and contingent liability position of approximately $4.4 billion. Of this $4.4 billion we have a net reserve and deferred revenue position of $2.5 billion, this represents an overall reserve and revenue deferral position of over 50% of the financing portfolio position. Again, I would like to remind you that we believe this portfolio maintains an average or around investment grade. We believe that Cisco capital on board lease and loan port folio remains an excellent use of our own cash. We have not accessed any capital market for funds to finance this element of our operation. In summary we have long stated that our financial management and position are a competitive advantage for Cisco, and that belief has not changed even in light of the current economic condition. In fact, it is precisely during a difficult environment like we are currently experiencing that the strong financial foundation that we have allows us to focus on the things that we believe will grow our company and capture market transitions in the industry. I do believe our performance this quarter reflects our ability to manage profitability during a period of uncertainty, and I expect through continued prudent expense management, along with calculated investments in certain areas we will be able to balance the parties of growth and profitability as we move through the current environment. Through our unwavering focus on customers, a strong financial foundation and the power of a very talented global work force I believe Cisco will emerge stronger coming out of this period and enhance its position as a global business leader. I'll now turn the call back over to John. John Chambers - Chairman and CEO: Thank you, Frank. In this section of the call we will cover our geographies, customer segments, and products for Q1 in more detail. The products review will be in revenue growth terms while they geographic and customer segments will be discussed in terms of orders unless indicated otherwise. First, from a geographic and a customer segment point of view in terms of Q1 year over year order growth - Japan. Japan continued their solid momentum in Q1, with growth of approximately 20%. Leading the way was service provider with growth of approximately 45% year over year, which represents approximately half of our total business in Japan. Public sector grew in the mid-teens, enterprise and commercial were relatively flat. Overall given all the challenges we feel good about our momentum in the Japanese market. Now, moving on to Asia-Pacific - year over year order growth in Asia-Pacific was in Q1 very dramatically by country. China grew in the mid teens while India was down in the mid single digits. From a customer segment perspective service provider and the commercial market grew in mid single digits. While enterprise was down in the high teens, Asia in total was down approximately 4% year over year in terms of orders. Europe , after maintaining growth in our Q4 fiscal year 2008 in the low double digits, we saw Europe's growth slow to negative mid single digits in Q1. Germany continued to do reasonably well, but the UK, Italy, Spain and the Netherlands were challenged, all with double digit decreases in orders year over year. From a customer segment perspective, commercial and the consumer were relatively flat in Europe, Public sector grew in the mid single digits, enterprise was down in the Mid single digits while service provider was down in the mid teens year over year. Moving to the US, excluding Canada. For the US, orders in Q1 were down approximately 8% year over year. From a customer segment perspective, enterprise growth, not including public sector, was down in the high teens. Commercial, service provider and public sector were down in the mid-single digits in Q1 year over year. The emerging market theaters, not including our emerging Asian countries, were down slightly in terms of orders. Enterprise in the emerging markets was down in the high single digits while the commercial grew in the mid-single digits, service provider was down slightly Q1 year over year. In summary, from a customer segment perspective, enterprise year over year order growth across all of Cisco was down approximately 11%, while the service provider, commercial and public sector were approximately flat from the year over year orders perspective. Products – Q1 year over year product revenue growth was up approximately 8% and detailed and/or individual product areas were covered in the opening section of our call. In summary, although we all would like to avoid the downturns, our vision of how the industry is going to evolve appears to be playing out very much as we expected. We believe our differentiated strategy is also achieving the benefits both to Cisco and our customers that we thought were possible. And finally, our execution is on target in terms of the results as measured by our customer partnership perspective, market share and share of our customer’s total communications and IT expenditures, as the network becomes the platform for revenue capabilities. Now I’d like to turn it back over to Frank for additional detail of the financial guidance and other financial highlights. Frank, back to you. Frank Calderoni - CFO: Thanks, John. Let me remind you again that our comments include forward looking statements, you should review our recent SEC filings that identify important risk factors, and understand that actual results could materially differ from those contained in the forward looking statements. The guidance we are providing is on a non-GAAP basis with reconciliation to GAAP. It is very difficult to provide a forecast given the dramatic variability and the uncertainties going on in the market. These events increase the potential that our actual results could vary materially from our expectations. To reiterate John’s earlier note, our revenue guidance for Q2 makes the prudent assumption that the order momentum challenges that we saw in October will continue into Q2. Therefore, we anticipate total revenue for the second quarter to be down approximately 5-10% year over year. At this point, let me remind you that in light of regulation FD, Cisco will not comment on its financial guidance during the quarter unless it is done through an explicit public disclosure. Now let me give you additional details on the Q2 financial guidance. As we have said in the past, forecasting gross margins has always been challenging due to various factors such as volume, product mix, variable component costs, customer and channel mix as well as competitive pricing pressures. That being said, we believe that total gross margins in Q2 will be approximately 64%, reflecting the revenue guidance I just shared with you. We believe Q2 operating expenses will be approximately 39-41% of revenue, as you would expect in this environment, and as John outlined earlier, we are focused on managing our expenses through a pause in hiring, further decreasing travel and discretionary related expenses as well as deferring certain capital related projects. Also as John mentioned, our goal is to reduce our expenses for fiscal year ’09 by over $1 billion from our original budget. Considering the expense control actions I previously mentioned, this means we are targeting our Q4 fiscal year ’09 quarterly expense run rate to be reduced by about $200 million - $300 million as compared to our Q1 fiscal year ’09 quarterly expense run rate. While we will undertake appropriate expense management initiatives in the current environment, we will also make some calculated investments into areas where we believe we can accelerate development and Cisco’s leadership. We expect the areas will be adjacencies to our current markets, where we feel it is possible to extend the network as a platform, such as next generation companies, globalization, virtualization of the data center, video and collaboration architecture. We expect interest and other income to be approximately $130 million in the 2nd quarter. Our tax provision rate for Q2 is approximately 22%. While we expect to continue our share repurchase program, it is difficult the exact weighted average shares outstanding. We are modeling share counts to be down $50-$100 million in weighted average shares outstanding for EPS purposes. In this estimate of share count, we are not taking into consideration any further change in stock price that could occur in the second half fiscal year ’09. At the point of reference, a $1 movement in our average stock price would change the calculated shares outstanding for the purposes of determining EPS by approximately $10 million. Regarding cash flow from operations, we would expect to generate $500-$700 million per month. For our Q2 fiscal year ’09 GAAP earnings, we anticipate that Q2 GAAP EPS will be $.05 per share to $.08 per share lower than non-GAAP EPS, primarily due to acquisition related charges and stock compensation expense. Please view the slides that accompany this web cast for more detail. Other than those items noted above, there are not other significant differences between our GAAP and our non-GAAP guidance. This guidance assumes no additional acquisitions, asset impairments, restructuring and tax and other events which may or may not be significant. Again, I’ll turn the call back over to John. John Chambers - Chairman and CEO: Frank, thank you very much. I would like to make some summary comments at this point as my view of Cisco’s momentum and opportunities entering Q2 of fiscal year 2009. In areas that Cisco can control or influence, our momentum continues to be solid in the areas of product leadership, innovation and spot leadership. Balance in a very tough environment, given the global challenges, continues to be reasonable across our geographies, products, services and customer segments. This balance normally works to our advantage when there is a slowdown in a product area, a customer segment, or one or two geographies. However, when you are often the number one player across these categories and the challenges truly go global across all these categories, it is almost impossible to avoid the impact. As we said before, even if the market slows, we don’t see this change in our long term growth targets. If we execute the way we have in prior slowdowns, and assuming that the global economy recovers the GDP growth rates similar to those in the middle of the decade, as we continue in the Q2 fiscal year 2009, we plan to aggressively invest in new and adjacent markets for the longer term, assuming global recovery, regardless of how long it takes for the macro-environment to rebound. We would not invest as aggressively if we were to determine that this current slowdown was going to be long in duration, and that we didn’t have a high probability of achieving our 12-17% long term growth objectives and normal economic environment as the market recovers. In terms of major areas where the momentum appears solid and even possibly gaining, would be the following areas: First, innovation and product leadership looks very solid across our core technologies, first and second wave of advanced technologies and our new, emerging technologies. Second, collaboration and network enabled 2.0 acceptance in Cisco’s leadership role. Third, speed, skill and flexibility. As we move into new market adjacencies based upon our collaboration teamwork approach, our counsels and boards organization structure, combined with our vision strategy and execution model. Fourth, emerging markets. While some of the countries may be challenged in the short term, we are positioning ourselves especially in the selected emerging countries. For the long run in terms of country transformation in partnership with our customers at both the business and government levels. Fifth, Japan in service provider next generation build-outs. While we believe there are some more positive areas than there are areas of concern, the areas that we continue to focus on are expanding and include the US, Europe and part of the emerging countries. As we stated earlier, we do believe that the challenges that initially affected the US have spread to other countries around the world. On a global and US basis, we see the same challenges and uncertainties from an economic, political and capital spending perspective that many of you continue to witness. The second area that we are watching closely is service provider CapEx spending. One way to analyze CapEx growth in service providers is capital expenditures as a percentage of total sales. The rate of growth in this area appears to be moderating, although it varies dramatically from company to company capital spending and by geography. While our technology and business partnership relationship in most of these service providers are continuing to get even stronger, there are clearly some very tough comparisons for our service provider business to fiscal year 2007 Q4 and fiscal year 2008 Q1 and Q2, which had very strong year over year growth rates in service providers. Again, if the market does continue to slow, we believe this will not dramatically change our long term opportunities with our vision of how the industry evolved and our differentiated strategy. In fact, it is our intent to expand our share of customer spend during these corrections as we have done in the past. We also believe that our opportunities to expand in our current markets and market adjacencies are actually increasing. This is true from the data center to the home market, from the service provider to the small to medium business and consumer. Therefore, you will continue to see us invest aggressively where appropriate, while maintaining our focus on our financial models. Once again, with the usual caveats that we discussed earlier and in our financial reports, our Q2 fiscal 2009 guidance is for year over year revenue to be in the negative -5-10% range. We believe our long term growth opportunities remain in the 12-17% range, again assuming our usual caveat and global GDP growth. We will focus on what we can control and influence, and attempt to position Cisco to gain momentum in market transitions whether they are an industry consolidation, product transitions, market adjacency opportunities, or economic. In summary, for those areas that we control and influence, we believe that our vision strategy and execution are in great shape and producing the results. As always, I want to thank our shareholders, customers, employees and partners for their support and continued confidence in our ability to execute during rapid industry consolidation, market transitions and challenging economic times. Now, Blair, I’d like to turn it back over to you for some comments and the Q&A. Blair Christie - SVP of Corporate Communications: Great, thank you John. We’ll now open the call to the question and answer session; we do request that the analysts please ask only one question. So Kim, why don’t you open the call to the first question?