Hello, everyone, and thank you for joining us today. I'll start with a brief recap of the quarter, overview of the market and update on our strategic priorities. Mark will cover our results in more detail before I close with some final thoughts. In the first quarter, we continued to build upon the positive operational momentum that we generated throughout 2023. We reported record revenues of $26 million, which was at the high end of our guidance range. This represents growth of 51% year-over-year and our revenues exceeded an annualized run rate of $100 million for the first time in Ouster's history. Our customers' continued adoption of REV7 sensors combined with our operational leverage drove non-GAAP gross margin expansion to 36%, which represents our highest level to date. During the quarter, we closed on numerous large deals in our smart infrastructure and industrial verticals. Within smart infrastructure, we continue to extend our collaboration with a leading global logistics company to install additional REV7 sensors and Ouster Gemini at their distribution yards. We see potential for further expansion as we are currently deploying our solutions on only 5% of their global footprint. Moreover, we estimate that this single customer represents only a fraction of the market opportunities for this use case. Last year alone, 10 of the largest retail and logistics companies collectively invested nearly $50 billion in capital expenditures. Our Gemini solution is designed to offer a myriad of benefits, such as reducing operating costs, boosting operating efficiency, fortifying perimeter security, enhancing workplace safety and alleviating labor constraints. We believe that these compelling value propositions will help secure an increasing portion of this spend. The industrial vertical is a perfect example of our belief that ultimately, everything that moves will become autonomous. During the first quarter, we landed million-dollar deals to bring REV7 to agriculture and port applications. Within agriculture, we see the potential for agricultural automation to become one of our largest end markets. Based on industry data, there are over 2 million tractors sold each year. Assuming 2 sensors per vehicle, each 1% penetration rate represents 40,000 sensors or nearly triple the amount of sensors we sold during 2023. Our solutions also bring a convincing value proposition to ports around the world. Throughput in ports globally surpassed 850 million containers in 2023. Our solutions can enable increased efficiency in tasks such as container positioning, tracking, collision avoidance, and twistlock detection. By saving 1 second per container, we estimate that ports can move an additional 20 million units per year. At an average terminal handling charge of $500 per container this represents $10 billion of incremental revenue for the port industry. Governments worldwide are investing in their infrastructure, and the U.S. alone has committed to spending over $20 billion on U.S. port infrastructure over the next 5 years. We feel well positioned to capitalize on this investment. Turning to our strategic business priorities for 2024. Our first priority is to expand software and grow the installed base. During the first quarter, Ouster trained a new deep learning perception model that advances our ambition to become a world leader in lidar powered perception solutions. With enhanced operating performance, our Gemini and Blue City customers now benefit from improvements to object detection at longer distances and multiple object tracking accuracy. We continue to expand Ouster Gemini and Blue City deployments and closed millions in software attached sales in the first quarter. Ouster collaborated with the recipient of the U.S. Department of Transportation SMART Grant to empower pedestrian safety improvements, near miss detection, traffic counting and traffic flow analytics. Compared to competing solutions, Ouster provides superior all-weather performance, privacy protection and the ability to accurately detect and classify multiple types of road users. With over 300,000 signalized intersections in the U.S. alone, we view the market for intelligent transportation systems as a tremendous future growth opportunity. Our smart infrastructure team also recently attended major industry events, including the United States largest security trade show. There were a few anecdotes that I'd like to share. First, one of the world's largest retailers noted that Ouster was one of the true gems of the show. While one of the largest security integrators in North America said Ouster was the most interesting technology he has seen in 20 years. This positive feedback reinforces our conviction that lidar is poised to become the preeminent technology for the next-generation smart infrastructure applications. Turning to hardware technology. Ouster continued to execute on its product road map in the first quarter. We introduced new firmware designed to enhance the performance capabilities of our REV7 sensors and coincides with heightened interest for AI and robotics customers. Delivered over the air, the update supports improved accuracy and 0 minimum range and will enable operations in tighter spaces and closer proximity to other objects. Our next-generation L4 custom silicon chip is taped out and is expected to bring significant improvements in performance, reliability and manufacturability, along with safety certifications to the OS sensor family. We continue to develop our automotive-grade custom silicon and plans to integrate the Chronos chip into our final form factor, solid-state digital flash or DF sensors in the next year. DF represents a first of its kind, truly solid state, compact, affordable and performance family of automotive-grade lidar sensors. Finally, we progressed on our long-term financial framework during the first quarter. Our first quarter revenue growth of 51% and margin expansion to 29% aligned well with the parameters we have laid out. While we are pleased that our GAAP operating expenses of $33 million were 14% lower than the third quarter of 2023, we do expect our GAAP operating expenses to fluctuate quarter-to-quarter primarily due to changes in noncash stock-based compensation expenses and other items. We continue to look for further opportunities to optimize our cost structure and reduce our cash burn. The first quarter marked strong operating results and progress on all 3 of our strategic business objectives. I'll now turn the call over to our CFO, Mark Weinswig, to provide more context on our financial results for the first quarter.