Welcome everyone. Before I get started, our presentation and Safe Harbor Statement are available on our website. Our financial review will focus on year-over-year non-GAAP performance metrics on an organic basis. In addition, we will focus on adjusted numbers that we believe more accurately portray the underlying performance of our business. This means we will exclude divested agriculture and mobility businesses. We also adjust for the approximately $50 million of January 1st term license revenue that was recognized in the first quarter of 2024 but not in the first quarter of 2025 because January 1st, 2025, fell into the fiscal fourth quarter of 2024. We exited 2024 on a strong footing, strategically, operationally and financially. The results of the first quarter of 2025 are further evidence of the strength of our business. To understand how we are positioned to navigate the uncertainty at the moment is to understand the quality of our performance in the first quarter, which can be expressed in three words; clarity, durability, and momentum. Clarity manifests as the simplification and focus we have brought to our business over the last few years. On February 8th, we closed the sale of our Transportation Mobility business to Platform Science, further solidifying our strategic focus to compete and invest where we have a natural right to win. Starting with Slide 4, durability manifests through the quality of our business model, which we intentionally transformed over the last few years. Today, we are three quarter software, two-thirds ARR asset-light and operating with a strong balance sheet. We are in the business of selling productivity and efficiency outcomes to our customers, and our technologies are mission-critical. While visibility and predictability into the future is far from perfect, it is definitively higher and better than at any point in our 47-year history. In the first quarter, as detailed on Slide 5, momentum manifested in a beat across the board. Revenue at $841 million was up 3% organically and up 10% after adjusting for the timing of January 1. ARR at $2.11 billion was up 17% organically and was ahead of expectations across our segments. EPS at $0.61 was also ahead of expectations. Congratulations to our team and our partners. Despite the strong start to the year and our current momentum, we are maintaining our guidance for the year as we feel the prudent move is to inject a degree of conservatism into our outlook. Tariffs are modest in our software-centric business and have thus far been offset with pricing. We will all know more in three months, and we will recalibrate at that point. One area of Trimble where we are not cautious is in our AI journey, where we are moving with a clarity of purpose to better serve our customers while further strengthening our own business operations. We're not just talking, we are acting. In April, we held a virtual internal AI summit with nearly 2,500 internal attendees, where we spent a day reviewing priorities and work in progress. In addition, we have OKRs throughout the company to drive execution and accountability to AI outcomes. Slide 6 provides a framework for how we think about internal and external applications of AI on one axis and delivery of cost efficiencies and revenue growth on the other axis. This framing helps us allocate capital with intention. For example, our product managers are leveraging AI to develop marketing and technical requirements documentation. Our marketers are beginning to generate sales pipeline with agents mining data from our CRM systems. Our sellers are leveraging AI for sales coaching. Our customer success teams are leveraging AI for case deflection and our software engineers are programming and testing with AI productivity tools. We are also releasing AI capabilities into our customer-facing solutions, from natural language prompted design to feature extraction out of 3D point clouds to automating invoices and even releasing stand-alone automation products to connect to carriers and shippers. We believe we have a natural right to win and an AI forward emphatically so given the unique scope and scale of Trimble in the physical and digital world. With that in mind, let's step back and share our view on the macros. And for words, opportunity, coupled with uncertainty. On an absolute basis, the uncertainty of tariffs and trade policy put sand in the gears and stoke fears of an economic downturn. Despite these fears, the business is resilient, and we outperformed in the quarter. On a relative basis, we look at how our business is competitively positioned. In this respect, if we hit a downturn, we believe we can outperform and win market share. Weak competitors will reduce investment or exit the market, and we have the ability to run cross-sell and upsell plays if new logo generation becomes more difficult. At our Investor Day in December, we talked about $1.4 billion of cross-sell opportunities in the portfolio. We also have the balance sheet to continue to take subscription models to market in our software and hardware offerings, thus delivering more affordable access to our technology. In summary, this leadership team has successfully managed through challenging environments by applying a simple and consistent principle, position ourselves to exit periods of challenge on a stronger competitive footing. Year-to-date, the opportunities have outweighed the uncertainties. Across end markets and geographies, we see pockets of strength at the same time we see pockets of modest weakness. In the last few weeks, I have met inverse with dozens of global customers and partners in seven countries. Most of them were level-headed and taking a wait-and-see approach. We have seen modest softness in the public sector in the U.S. and slightly longer sales cycles with enterprise customers. On the other hand, Germany's announcement of infrastructure spend has been a positive. We see global strength in customer segments such as small to midsized construction companies and in industry segments such as data centers, renewables and mining. With that context, let's talk about each of our segments, starting with AECO and a quote from an engineering customer who said the following, with all these technologies connecting together with AI and internet of things, having all your solutions under one platform just makes sense. This sentiment is indicative of the success we are having with Trimble Construction One and our cross-selling efforts. In the quarter, ARR outperformed, up 19% to a record $1.29 billion. ACV bookings remained strong, growing in the mid-teens. Indicators we pay special attention to include ACV bookings, pipeline, net retention and the lifetime value to customer acquisition cost ratio. All these indicators are healthy at the moment. In the last weeks, we have launched the 2025 versions of our bema engineering and architecture and design solutions both of which are bringing new AI features to market. Moving to Field Systems. I'll start with the quote from a customer talking about the value proposition of our machine control and Guidance-as-a-Service offering. The Trimble offering allows me to sleep better at night with the subscription, budgeting equipment costs on bids is easier, and it makes us more competitive. I don't have to worry about outdated software or communication between systems or that the technology we just spent thousands of dollars on is now obsolete. That's a subscription advantage that is irreplaceable. The business outperformed in the quarter with particular strength in civil construction and advanced positioning. The subscription offering in the quote contributed to 25% ARR growth in the segment to a record $358 million. An interesting and important fact is that 50% of our customers who bought machine control as a service in the quarter were new logos once again affirming that smart business model transformations expand addressable markets. In early April, our field systems team was at the bauma Trade Show in Munich, where our technology was present on more than 20 OEM boots, signifying the importance of Trimble in the ecosystem and demonstrating our commitment to serve the mixed fleet. Moving to Transportation. I'll start by quoting a long-time customer who said, "We are impressed by the high quality of work and expertise that Trimble brings to a digitalization." This quote is indicative of the fundamental transformation happening in our served industries, which transcends economic cycles, thus providing context for continued growth in an underlying freight recession. ARR and transportation grew 7% to a record $459 million. The split of revenue in this business is 40%; Europe, Middle East and Africa, 57% North America, and 3% rest of world, and our systems are mission-critical, which we believe provide a downside ballast of China, U.S. trade further deteriorates. With respect to KPIs in the segment, they are the same ones we think about in AECO, including ACV bookings, which exceeded our expectations in the quarter in which we expect to grow double-digits this year. For market health, we look at tender rejection rates along with spot pricing for more real-time market conditions and both are relatively steady. In the Transporeon business, we can also see pretty clear industry segment trends. For example, in Europe, we can confirm what appears to be somewhat self-evident. The automotive segment is down while retail and construction materials are up. In summary, clarity, durability and momentum in the form of a strong start to the year gives us confidence and conviction to stay the course. Phil, over to you.