Ed Meyercord: Hi, Dave. I think we have — yeah, the one area which for us is a small percentage of our business, but you have seen some softness in service provider. I think you’ve probably heard that more broadly in the marketplace. We have some very targeted service provider customers and through the quarter, we think that some of the capital spending programs with some of the larger end-users has slowed down a bit. That being said, as we forecast the second half of the year, we’re seeing healthier demand coming from our service provider team, in terms of the call for the second half. But that would be the one to call-out, otherwise, I would say, relative strength for us. The other high-level comment that I would make is that, we are in a position from being a somewhat smaller player with a lot of other larger players in the industry for us to take share.
So in some of the verticals and we’ll be coming out and announcing some wins that we’ve got, we’ve been able to win significant share in some of these markets, where there’s a meaningful share shift that sort of transcends what’s going on and maybe more the general macro sense, which will be coming out with. So, I would say in general, pretty steady across the board in terms of the verticals and service provider, which was soft. With our very focused applications, we see strengthening from where we were in the first half through the second half.
Dave Kang: And speaking of service providers on Ericsson, they talked about the 5G market a little bit choppy this year, especially first half. Do you still expect to achieve your target of $100 million in 5G, despite Ericsson’s comments?
Ed Meyercord: We do. We still see strength. We don’t think 5G is going away. We think there is a pause with some of the buyers, as they’re tightening their budget, but the long-term opportunity is a resounding, yes. The service providers are going to upgrade their infrastructure. And fortunately, we’re in a very strong position as part of that infrastructure upgrade. And so, we think that’s the case. The other thing is that, they are more with Ericsson, they have more service providers in the queue. So in terms of the number of proof-of-concepts and then proof-of-concepts turning into a meaningful go-live launches, that funnel continues to build nicely.
Dave Kang: And any other potential customers in the pipeline that you can talk about or is it still the North America service provider and the European equipment vendor?
Ed Meyercord: Yeah. Those are the — I mean, they remain the big two and what I would say is, we see more opportunities with both of those customers. As we look at service provider, we have a sell to. From a traditional IT perspective, we have a sell with where we’re part of their solution from an OEM. And now we see opportunities to sell through to be their partner, their enterprise partner. And so, these are the three prongs that we’re attacking the service provider market with. And there are significant growth opportunities that we see in the market.
Dave Kang: And my last question is, I may have missed it, but did you give out the backlog composition in the mix?
Ed Meyercord: I don’t believe we did give the composition of backlog mix. When you’re saying mix, you’re referring to?
Dave Kang: Wired and Wireless.
Stanley Kovler: We don’t break it down, Dave.
Ed Meyercord: Actually broken that down.
Dave Kang: Okay.
Stanley Kovler: We give a general number.
Dave Kang: Yeah. Thank you.