Good morning, and as always, thanks to each of you for your interest. I will start today by sharing my observations of some notable directions within our strong '23 Q2 operating results and then as usual, I will briefly remark upon some corporate developments. In preview, our growth in the quarter was more broad and balanced, which I consider to be better, ranging from E365 accretion across our largest enterprise accounts, through broadening and compounding penetration within our large SMB opportunities. Among infrastructure sectors, resources by way of mining and hence sequent [ph], slowed down and lost its lead for now to strongly growing public works/utilities. Despite the countervailing dip in global CapEx for new mines, our platform acquisition is growing considerably faster than BSY otherwise, following only our other platform acquisition, Power Line Systems. And as to our key metric year-over-year ARR growth, this all nets out, while broader and better, to a narrower full year 2023 range, considering that in China, which is where all relative security is concentrated, virtually any second half new business outcome will continue to erode our ARR there. In '23 Q2, we were BSY busier than ever before, beating or surpassing our own expectations on all corporate outlook metrics. Of course, we all primarily focus on constant currency business performance ARR growth year-over-year, which we sustain within the robust level of 13%, our high watermark. However, going behind this headline, I consider that our ARR growth has directionally improved. One aspect in the math is that programmatic acquisitions happen now to be contributing only minimally. But while acknowledging this year's favorable end market conditions, I think that strong rational execution by Nicholas' teams is ever broader and better. Although such balance and consistency increasingly characterize virtually every access of our business, an example is the breadth of new business momentum ranging from our largest to smallest accounts. Recall that we use this term new business to factor in license sales as well as ARR growth, though for quotas and achievement, we multiply recurring revenue by an appropriately higher weighting factor. By virtue of our main growth initiatives since going public in 2020, this quarter, the bulk of our new business was divided almost equally between our E365 program and our virtuosity-led growth in SMB. E365 ARR growth is a combination of onetime uplifts from accounts upgrading to the program where our consumption charges per application per day are meant to cover our costs of the enterprise success team, digital workflow experts that we dedicate to each 365 account and what is now most prevalent, accretion in these accounts consumption and application mix. Within '23 Q2, our ARR proportion from E365 increased very largely from this accretion in existing E365 accounts for home going digital through E365 blueprint is a more urgent priority than ever. Constrained by skill shortages, these accounts need to improve the quality and throughput of their engineers' work as they face substantial and growing backlogs. In fact, this quarter's ACEC survey of all U.S. engineering firms shows that the median backlog is now a full year as demand for infrastructure engineering continues to outstrip capacity. The same survey shows that while these firms are not so sure about the macro U.S. economy 12 months from now, each firm tends to be ever more confident in their own resilience a year from now. As to a greater degree than ever, they expect their backlog then to be even greater. These firms year-ahead market outlook by infrastructure sector tends to correspond with our own '23 Q2 tone of business, led in growth sentiment now by public works/utilities then resources followed by industrial, and lastly, commercial/facilities. This quarter, ACEC also survey the extent of the labor shortage brought about by this unprecedented workload. Across all firms, there is one unfilled infrastructure engineering position for each 10 full-time positions. This is a motivator for our E365 accounts to prioritize blueprints for new digital workflows that entail upselling users to more specialized applications, better fit for purpose for their particular project work at any given time. This leads to the greater spending per day, holding constant pricing for each product that we annually measure as application mix accretion. I can directionally confirm that our steadily expanding E365 program is continuing to broaden and accelerate our application mix accretion driving directionally better ARR growth. Our overall net revenue retention rate in turn reflects this progress in going digital within our existing accounts, led by E365 consumption and upsell even or particularly as our accounts deal with workforce constraints. I'm pleased to report that NRR was sustained for the quarter at our 110% high watermark. Getting from these 10 percentage points of NRR accretion in existing accounts to this year's 13% ARR growth is attributable to sustaining at our 3% high watermark, ARR growth from subscriptions in new logos, of course, mostly in SMB. Because the SMB share of the overall infrastructure engineering market substantially exceeds the SMB share of our own ARR, I believe that our investments and improvements in SMB are bearing fruit to make our ARR growth sustainably broader and better. In particular, our Virtuosity subscriptions for individual practitioners have grown exponentially in new and cumulative ARR, including in '23 Q2, and again, including a record number of quarterly new logos for Virtuosity, which is now approaching another digit. Now obviously, this magnitude of continued ARR compounding depends upon the renewal rates for these subscriptions. And I have previously mentioned that we would quantify this at such time as we would have statistically sufficient experience. Within smaller businesses and for individual practitioners, we cannot expect retention rates comparable to those of subscriptions used widely and diversely across an enterprise account. This is particularly the case for specialized Virtuoso subscriptions which may be entered into for a particular infrastructure project with a finite duration. So I am pleased to now be able to report that after much hard work, our Virtuosity renewal rates have at about 80%. We believe that with our digital experience automation to make self-serviced renewals even easier, we can improve this somewhat. And by the way, given that the absolute ARR numbers are still relatively small, we won't report this renewal rate regularly. But even beyond ARR, our license sales new business is generated mostly in SMB accounts. For '23 Q2, about one third of these SMB license sales are to almost 300 new logos. Recalling that we continue to offer perpetual licenses principally because our main competitor does not, I believe that a significant proportion of these SMB new logos, including the many more for Virtuosity subscriptions must be competitive takeaways. Finally, SMB's broadening and better in contribution to our new business extends globally. In China, with geopolitical factors overhanging our prospects with our historical mainstay down enterprises, the majority of our reasonably improved net new business in '23 Q2 was thanks to perpetual license sales in SMB. Among the axes of directionally broader and better growth, I would like to turn now to infrastructure sectors, where, as Nicholas will provide our usual color, we saw in '23 Q2 the normalization that is the convergence towards the mean of resources and mining, in particular, its major impetus for us, down from its extraordinary global pace setting. You may have seen reports that this phenomenon is another reflection of an overlay cycle of reduction in demand in China. I don't think there's much doubt anywhere that the economic and environmental factors driving the current mining super cycle are still long lived, but the momentum won't be consistently sustained at the maximum. Most recently, the mining majors are confronting pricing fluctuations and are thus acting more cautiously in their procurements and the mining juniors are considerably fettered by tighter equity markets, higher interest rates and inflation. These factors mainly impact CapEx for new mines and major extensions rather than the OpEx for throughput of existing mines, which accounts for most of the volume and growth for Seequent. But Seequent subsurface modeling is also used as a precursor to new mine development. So on the margin, these factors are impinging upon what have been sequenced consistently very high growth rates. Since acquisition over two years ago, while growing organically more than twice as fast as BSY otherwise, Seequent has, in fact, doubled in scale, including incorporating along with many subsequent programmatic acquisitions, our previously acquired geotechnical engineering software. During the past year, we have prioritized Seequent integration generally into our corporate systems, processes and commercial models, including into our E365 account and blueprints, by virtue of lots of attention, this is going well. One purpose has been to extend the benefits of and opportunities for subsurface digital twins in the civil infrastructure market, which will also serve to bring Seequent an environmental modeling counterbalance to their historical concentration in mining. The predictable result of these maturing and integration factors has been a direction toward convergence between Seequent's growth rate and the increasing fundamental norm for BSY otherwise, which reflects largely the successful growth initiatives I've been discussing. A footnote is that the inflation factor since the beginning of 2022, would make it mathematically harder for Seequent's rate of growth to remain at an integer multiple. The result as in '23 Q2 is a broader, better, balance and consistency across our company and market sectors. And that takes me to our midyear updated outlook for the full year 2023. Our established 2023 outlook ARR growth range, of course, constant currency business performance has been 11.5% to 13%, which we are now reasonably prepared given the consistently robust first half to narrow to 12% to 13%. Most of our initial caution about ARR growth for this year had to do with China. And visibility there remains relatively limited. While China now represents only about 3.3% of our overall ARR, and despite a welcome turnaround in SMB-driven new business there in Q2, over the course of 2023 to date, the Chinese proportion has fallen by about 0.4% of total ARR. This has correspondingly reduced what would otherwise have been our overall ARR growth rate had China merely kept pace with the rest of the world. This ARR growth drag is likely to continue or to increase as traditionally in China, each year's fourth quarter accounts for most of the year's new business. This year, we share with the rest of the world and for instance, with the mining market, obscured visibility into China's direction. But in our case, it's amplified by our own intentional go-to-market pivot in China, which, as I described last quarter, will tend to relatively reduce our ARR even if and as it hopefully becomes successful. After only one quarter so far, it's too soon to report on the net impact. But by the end of the year, presumably this will have become apparent. And in comparison to previous years, which have generally included more ARR acquired with programmatic acquisitions than in our current outlook for this full year, again, I consider our sustained ARR growth to be behind the numbers directionally broader and better. As I have discussed, this is true across commercial models and account sizes and across infrastructure sectors. Nicholas will reinforce this from the standpoint of regions and products as well. First, by way of corporate developments and related to these subjects, we announced during the quarter the recruitment of Alan Lee, formerly Chief Operating Officer of SAP China, and a wise veteran of creative alliances there as our only general manager anywhere in the world with responsibility for on-the-ground leadership of our new and unique for us go-to-market strategy in China by way of joint ventures and channels. Alan is now aboard in China and is enthusiastically at the helm. And we'll have more to say about this at the year on Infrastructure 2023 conference. The conference will be in Singapore in October of this year, and to make up for the time zone difficulties of travel or even live streaming for most of you, I have asked Eric to compile concise video excerpts of the proceedings relevant to investors. The independent juries are presently judging our accounts 300-plus going digital award nominations, and the finalist who will present in person in Singapore will be announced next week. Their case studies will help us all to assess the pace and distribution of infrastructure digital twin advancements in the world, which I can't wait to see and report upon it. And now over to Nicholas for fuller operating perspectives on '23 Q2.