Thank you, Peter, and good morning, everyone. My discussion today will reference slides from the supplemental presentation posted on our website. I will refer to revenue as reported and in constant currency, but with segment revenue growth discussed in constant currency only. I will also provide information, excluding license and support revenue for Ex-L&S to allow investors to assess progress we are making outside the portion of ECS, where revenue and profit recognition is tied to license renewal timing, which can be uneven year-to-year and between quarters. As Peter discussed, the company has come a long way in transforming our portfolio, building market awareness for our digital capabilities and opening up new addressable markets with innovations such as Unisys Logistics Optimization. Our profitability is moving in the right direction as well. We are maintaining our strong L&S gross margin, while improving Ex-L&S gross margin through delivery efficiency and solution mix. We are also streamlining SG&A and working towards lower legal and environmental costs and payments beginning next year, which will improve free cash flow conversion going forward. Continuing to improve and execute in these areas will increase our ability to achieve enhanced cash flow generation. Looking at our results in more detail, you can see on Slide 4 of our presentation, total company revenue of $488 million was down 5.5% year-over-year and 7.1% in constant currency due to the expected cadence of L&S renewals over time. First quarter Ex-L&S revenue was $395 million, an increase of 4% and 3% in constant currency. As a reminder, components of Ex-L&S solutions are our Digital Workplace Solutions and our Cloud Applications and Infrastructure segments in addition to specialized services and next-gen compute solutions with ECS and business process solutions reported within all other. DWS revenue was $132 million were flat to the prior period. The fourth quarter of 2023 had a particularly high concentration of new business signings. We expect this segment to grow in the second half of the year, so those contracts in our first quarter new logo signings begin to generate revenue. CA&I revenue was $129 million, an increase of 2.3%. Growth was led by our more modern higher-margin solutions, including application development, particularly in the U.S. and Canada and within the public sector, including higher education, where we have deep expertise. ECS revenue was $147 million, down 24.4% due to the timing of L&S renewals. This was better than we expected due to the slightly higher license and support revenue than planned. Specialized services and next-gen compute solutions, which are our Ex-L&S solutions in the ECS segment grew 2.3%, led by specialized managed service group with clients in Latin America. L&S revenue was $93 million in the quarter, which compares to the $75 million we had anticipated. Upside was due to a first quarter renewal signing that we had expected in the second quarter. Our full year guidance continues to assume $375 million of license and support revenue, but with a more even distribution across quarters. Total company TCV declined 1% year-over-year, driven by a 20% decline in our Ex-L&S solutions, largely due to renewal timing. This year, we have less TCV up for renewal. If we sign the renewals we expect to close this year, renewals will still be a headwind of nearly 30 percentage points to total TCV. As Peter discussed, when excluding renewals, our new business TCV trends were solid. We signed a similar amount of new business TCV, as we did in the first quarter of 2023 due to good momentum with new logos and more than 60% year-over-year growth in next-generation solution new business TCV. We exited the quarter with a backlog of $2.8 billion, roughly flat year-over-year. Backlog declined approximately $200 million on a sequential basis, largely due to the seasonal nature of project work and the growing mix of next-generation solutions in our CA&I segment, which are generally shorter duration contracts. Trailing 12-month book-to-bill was 1.1x for both the total company and for our Ex-L&S solutions. Moving to Slide 5, first quarter gross profit was $136 million, representing a 27.9% gross margin. This compared to 30.8% in the prior year with the decline resulting from lower L&S gross profit due to license renewal timing. This was partially offset by improved gross margin in our Ex-L&S solutions. Ex-L&S gross profit was 18% compared to 13.8% a year ago for an increase of 420 basis points. The improvement was primarily due to delivery cost savings and margin accretion from new business contracts. The quarter included a 140 basis point onetime benefit related to the resolution of a contractual dispute to the former clients for which we previously recognized a revenue reversal in the third quarter of 2023. This benefit impacts total company and Ex-L&S revenue and gross profit, but does not flow through segment results. DWS gross margin was 14.4% in the first quarter, a 250 basis point year-over-year improvement, reflecting results from ongoing cost initiatives. We continue to see significant long-term gross margin opportunity in the segment related to workforce management initiatives, incremental margins we were attaining on new business and utilization improvement in traditional solutions. CA&I gross margin was 16.6% in the first quarter, an expansion of 360 basis points year-over-year. In CA&I, we have achieved significant savings on labor costs by leveraging internal and early [ career hires ] to backfill open roles and improve our labor pyramid. We have also continued to focus on building our standardized variable solution architectures, increasing automation and reducing contractor costs. ECS gross margin was 57.8% in the first quarter, which compares to 66.7% in the prior year. The decline was fully attributable to lower L&S revenue compared to the first quarter of 2023. As a reminder, our L&S cost base will be fairly consistent in the short and medium term, but the license portion of renewals is recognized in full upon renewal signing, which leads to fluctuations in our ECS gross margin. Lower gross profit from L&S solutions was partially offset by a slight increase in gross margin from our SS&C solutions primarily due to better labor utilization on new business, specialized managed service contracts. Moving to Slide 6, our first quarter non-GAAP operating profit margin was 7.1% or 5.7% after adjusting for the onetime benefit due to the resolution of a contractual dispute with a former client. This was above the expectation we provided on our prior call of a low single-digit margin in the first quarter. Much of this is due to L&S revenue and profit from higher license and support revenue from the early contract signing I mentioned previously. First quarter adjusted EBITDA was $65 million, representing an adjusted EBITDA margin of 13.4% compared to 19% in the prior year period. The year-over-year non-GAAP operating margin and adjusted EBITDA margin declines were due to [ both ] impact of license and support renewal timing. GAAP operating expenses increased year-over-year, which included an increase in cost reduction and certain legal expenses, which we adjust for in our non-GAAP operating margin. We are continuing to streamline our corporate operations and took several actions during the quarter to outsource certain corporate functions, consolidate real estate and centralize IT. We had a net loss in the first quarter of $150 million or a diluted loss per share of $2.18. This was almost exclusively due to $132 million non-cash settlement loss we incurred related to a group annuity contract purchased in one of our U.S. qualified defined benefit plan. This transaction removed approximately $200 million in pension liabilities for a similar amount of planned assets. This compares to a net loss of $175 million in the first quarter of 2023, which included a non-cash settlement loss of $183 million related to a similar pension plan annuity purchase. Neither annuity purchase had any impact on the company's cash balances. These annuity purchases are expected to reduce the volatility in our GAAP pension deficit and our projected future cash contributions. They also reduce the future cost of a full risk transfer of our U.S. qualified defined benefit pension plans should we choose to do so, as they lower the annuity purchase premium that is based on total liabilities. Looking ahead, we do not anticipate any additional annuity purchases for the remainder of 2024. First quarter adjusted net income was $3 million or $0.04 per share compared to $35 million in the prior year period or $0.51 per share. Turning to Slide 7. Capital expenditures totaled approximately $20 million in the first quarter, relatively flat on a year-over-year basis. As a reminder, we have a capital-light strategy, which is focused on limiting the capital intensity of the business and a portion of our capital expenditures are related to research and development for our technology platforms. First quarter free cash flow was $4 million, up from a negative $8 million in the prior year period. The improvement was mainly due to working capital dynamics, as well as lower international pension contributions, which are primarily based on pre-negotiated funding plans. Excluding environmental, certain legal and restructuring and other payments, as well as postretirement contributions, our adjusted free cash flow was [ $17 ] million in the first quarter, similar to the $20 million of adjusted free cash flow in the prior year period. Moving to Slide 8, our quarter end cash balances are $383 million compared to $388 million at year-end. Our net leverage ratio is 0.5x, up slightly from 0.4x at year-end. Including all defined benefit pension plans, our net leverage ratio was 3.3x compared to 2.9x at the end of 2023. The modest increase in net leverage was due to the impact of L&S renewal timing, resulting in a decline in our last 12 months adjusted EBITDA. Our liquidity is strong with no borrowings against our revolver and no major debt maturities until our $485 million senior secured notes come due in November 2027. I will now provide an update on our global pension plans. Each year end, we provide detailed estimated projections for our expected global pension cash contributions and GAAP deficit, which change based on factors such as financial market conditions, funding regulations and actuarial assumptions. Quarterly updates as of this update do not have the same level of detail. Based on market conditions, we estimate that cash contributions to our global pension plans for the 5-year period beginning in 2024 are approximately $485 million, essentially unchanged from our 2023 year-end projections. Based on recent asset returns and discount rates, we estimate, as of March 31st, 2024, our global pension deficit has not changed materially from year-end 2023. Turning to Slide 9, I will now discuss our financial guidance ranges. We are reiterating our full year financial guidance ranges. We continue to expect total company revenue growth of negative 1.5% to positive 1.5% in constant currency and non-GAAP operating profit margin of 5.5% to 7.5%. Our revenue guidance range assumes growth in our Ex-L&S solutions of approximately 1.5% to 5% and L&S revenue of approximately $375 million. We also continue to expect approximately $10 million of positive free cash flow for the full year, which embeds the following assumptions. We expect capital expenditures of $90 million to $100 million for the full year, in line with our CapEx light strategy. Net interest payments are expected to be approximately $20 million for the full year and postretirement contributions, primarily in our international pension plans of approximately $20 million. We also continue to anticipate cash payments for environmental, certain legal matters and restructuring and other payments of $75 million to $80 million in total. Our elevated legal payments in 2023 and now 2024 are primarily related to a matter in which Unisys is the plaintiff and payments for certain legal matters are expected to decline beginning next year. We also expect to see declines in environmental payments in the coming years, during which we also expect an approximate $30 million partial reimbursement of certain costs once cleanup work has been approved and finalized. Lastly, cash taxes are expected to be approximately $50 million for the year. On Slide 10, you will find an overview of the potential economic benefit of our tax assets. The majority of our tax assets are in the United States and EMEA. Utilization of these tax assets this year and in future years is expected to limit the increase in our cash taxes, thereby improving our free cash flow conversion, as we improve profitability in these geographies. Looking at the second quarter, we expect relatively flat total company year-over-year revenue growth, which assumes license and support revenue of approximately $90 million and Ex-L&S revenue of $385 million to $390 million. For our Ex-L&S solutions, this implies the second quarter year-over-year decline of approximately 2%. The slight dip we expect exclusive to the second quarter is largely due to a stronger back half weighting and expected third-party components and project work. This means that our full year guidance ranges imply stronger Ex-L&S growth in the second half of the year. The pipeline in shorter cycle deals is solid, and we have good visibility [ into a pickup ] in both DWS and CA&I revenues beginning later this quarter with the fourth quarter typically a seasonally strong quarter, as budgets accelerate into year-end. It is also important to note that 2023 included lower levels of new logo signings, which are an important component of revenue growth. We have already signed meaningful new logo TCV in the first quarter, which are primarily larger managed service contracts that will largely begin to generate revenue in the third quarter. Finally, we expect the second quarter non-GAAP operating profit in the low single digits, which is expected to be our lowest quarter of non-GAAP operating profit. Thank you. I will now turn the call over to Peter for any closing remarks.