Thanks, Mike, and thanks to all of you for joining us today. As Mike just summarized, in the first quarter, we drove substantial growth in recurring revenue, expanded our profit margins, particularly at gross margin and generated over $200 million of free cash flow. A year ago, we were faced with a series of unanticipated geopolitical and macroeconomic challenges that had a significant impact on our business in the first quarter and it compounded across the remainder of the year. At that time, we outlined our efforts to control the things that we could: productivity, price, cost efficiency, and customer support level. Those efforts enabled the recovery of our reported financial metrics and insulated our customers from our supply chain disruption and our labor challenges. And those early 2022 actions have now been augmented with further cost productivity actions in both Q4 and in this Q1 to generate incremental savings to offset any dis-synergies arising from the planned separation into 2 separate public companies. This quarter's results are demonstrative of an exceptional effort of our teams to simultaneously drive financial results, accelerate our strategic plan and ready the company for a pending separation transaction. I'll start on Slide 7 with a top-level overview of our first quarter, which for every guided metric, we painted the high end of the ranges we provided back in February. Starting in the top left, revenue was $1.9 billion, up 1% year-over-year as reported and up 4% on a constant currency basis. Recurring revenue was up 4% year-over-year and up 7% adjusted for FX. We continue to have success transitioning from onetime perpetual sales into multiyear subscription-based revenue stream. The nature of these contracts shifted $60 million of high profit revenue from what would have been previously recognized upfront to recurring revenue that will convert over the next several years. This intentional deferral of upfront revenue to recurring revenue lowered total revenue growth by 3 full points. The strong U.S. dollar compared to the year ago period had an unfavorable impact of $45 million primarily within our retail and self-service banking segment. Adjusted then for FX and the shift to recurring revenue, total revenue growth would have been about 7%. In the top right, adjusted EBITDA increased $31 million year-over-year to $302 million, up 11% year-over-year as reported and up 19% on a constant currency basis. Foreign currency exchange rates had an unfavorable impact of $18 million. Adjusted EBITDA margin expanded 150 basis points from the first quarter of 2022 to 16%. The increase in margin was driven by lower direct costs such as reductions in fuel, shipping and component costs, as well as the impact of indirect cost mitigation actions and a higher-margin revenue mix. The benefit of lower direct costs similarly added to a 190 basis points increase in adjusted gross margin rate. On the bottom left, reported non-GAAP EPS was $0.56, up $0.03 or 6% year-over-year as reported and up 27% on a constant currency basis. The strength of the U.S. dollar reduced EPS by $0.09. The non-GAAP tax rate was 27.4% versus 24.8% in the prior year, that reduced EPS by about another $0.02. And finally, we generated $209 million of free cash flow from both higher profitability and the anticipated improvements in our working capital. Back in October, we described our desire to generate at least $500 million of free cash flow before the separation transaction to reduce our financial leverage. In the first 2 quarters, of those $500 million, we've already generated $400 million of that bogey. Moving to Slide 8, which shows our retail segment results. Starting in the top left, retail revenue increased 1% year-over-year as reported and increased 4% adjusted for FX, driven by growth in services and point-of-sale hardware. We also shifted roughly $15 million of high profit revenue that would have previously occurred upfront to recurring revenue that will be recognized over the next 4 to 7 years. This intentional deferral of upfront revenue to recurring revenue lowered revenue growth in retail by 3 points. Adjusted for FX and the shift to recurring revenue, retail revenue would have grown at 7%. First quarter adjusted EBITDA increased 45% year-over-year and 70% adjusted for constant currency, resulting from improvements in component, labor and freight costs as well as other cost mitigation and pricing actions taken in the latter part of 2022 and even again in early 2023. The adjusted EBITDA rate was 17.6%, up 530 basis points over the prior year. The bottom of the slide shows retail segment key performance indicators. On the left, platform lane, a KPI that illustrates the success of our strategy to convert our retail customers to our platform-based subscription model. We increased our number of platform lanes by 33,000 lanes or 125% year-over-year. At the time of conversion, platform lanes drives an incremental $400 of ARR for an increase of $12 million versus last year. The platform lane increase was driven by rollouts in major convenience and fuel customers. While platform lanes currently represent less than 5% of our total lanes, we see accelerating momentum for the conversion of our traditional lanes and have a substantial lane conversion backlog. And once on the platform, the opportunity to upsell and cross-sell new features and functionality drives further ARPU expansion. In the center bottom is our self-checkout revenue. Self-checkout revenue was flat year-over-year on a trailing 12-month basis. And ARR was flat year-over-year. Similar to the impact on revenue, currency rates did affect all of our ARR calculations, including this one. Hospitality segment results. This chart shows results and illustrates the momentum across this business. Hospitality revenue increased $12 million or 6% year-over-year as reported and 7% adjusting for currency, driven by an increase in services and software revenue, including cloud services and payment processing. Adjusted EBITDA was up 29% year-over-year. Adjusted EBITDA margin rate expanded 440 basis points to 24%. A richer mix of software and services revenue, pricing and cost reductions, all helped push margin rate higher. Hospitality's key strategic metrics on the bottom of this slide includes platform sites, payment sites and ARR. Platform sites increased 16%, payment sites increased 50%, and ARR was up 12% year-over-year on higher ARPU at both platform and new payment sites. The average conversion to platform sites currently drives an incremental $7,000 a year in ARR, while the average conversion to payment site currently drives an incremental $4,000. Combined, the additional platform sites and payment sites contributed an incremental $35 million in ARR year-over-year. We continue to see strategic momentum in this business as enterprise clients transition to the platform and expand their functionality and SMB clients attach payments. Turning to Slide 10, which shows our digital banking segment. Digital banking revenue was flat year-over-year. The 2/3 of our revenue that is driven by user count increased in this quarter on higher used accounts and led to higher recurring revenue. This increase was offset, however, by lower nonrecurring revenue that can be lumpy. Adjusted EBITDA was down 13% year-over-year due to lower nonrecurring software revenue and enhanced investment in sales, marketing and R&D to grow this business faster. Adjusted EBITDA margin rate was 36%. Digital banking's key strategic metrics on the bottom of this slide include registered users, active users and annual recurring revenue. Registered users increased 8%, active users increased 6% year-over-year, and digital banking's core business growth is evident in our year-over-year increase of 7% in ARR. On Slide 11, we do some easy math to help you evaluate the combined segment of retail, hospitality and digital banking. These segments will form NCR RemainCo after the separation transaction. This roll-up is for directional indications only. The eventual financials for this company will be impacted by currently unallocated corporate costs by revenue and profit adjustments that reflect the planned perimeter of the transaction and by synergies or dis-synergies that result from the spin. The combined adjusted EBITDA was up 29% year-over-year adjusted for FX, with an adjusted EBITDA margin rate of 22%. Let's move to Slide 12. This is our payments and network segment. Starting in the top left. Payment and network revenue increased $24 million or 8% year-over-year and 11% adjusted for FX, driven by higher transaction volumes and an increase in payment processing. Adjusted EBITDA declined $15 million or 15% year-over-year and 14% adjusted for FX. More than all of this decline was caused by 10 interest rate hikes aggregating 5 full points over the last 3 quarters, raising our APM cash rental costs this quarter by approximately $40 million on a gross basis and $22 million on a net basis after our mitigation efforts. Adjusted EBITDA margin rate was 26%, down compared to the previous year on the same cash rental costs. Our cash rental costs are calculated using short-term interest rates, which have been and will continue to affect our results. That said, the hedging program, algorithm and operational optimization, and pricing adjustments or protection mitigates some of the impact of interest rates. As a result, interest rate net impact during the quarter was $22 million, and we project an additional impact of $20 million across the rest of the year. The bottom of this slide shows payments and network key strategic metrics. On the bottom left, endpoints increased 2% year-over-year. In the center bottom, our transaction, a KPI that illustrates payment process across all of our Allpoint network and across our merchant acquiring network. Transactions were up 2% year-over-year on a trailing 12-month basis, fueled by ATM withdrawal growth of 6%. The rise in both the frequency withdrawals and the amount withdrawn per transaction led to a 13% year-over-year increase in the total amount of cash dispensed globally. Annual recurring revenue in this business increased 8% year-over-year. Slide 13 shows our self-service banking segment results. Self-service banking revenue was flat as reported and up 4% on a constant currency basis, primarily due to growth in recurring revenue, which was up 10% on an FX-adjusted basis over the prior year. We continue to have success transitioning our self-service banking business from onetime perpetual sales into a multiyear subscription-based revenue stream. During the quarter, we shifted roughly $38 million in revenue that would have been upfront previously to recurring revenue. Intentional deferral of upfront revenue from recurring revenue lowered revenue growth by 6 points. Adjusted for FX and the shift to recurring revenue, self-service banking revenue growth would have been 10%. While a quarter ago, our outlook for this business suggested a full year 2023 decline in revenue, strong results and strong demand in Q1 suggests that this business could now deliver full year revenue similar to that in 2022, even after $150 million or nearly 6 points of growth is shifted to recurring revenue as part of our ATM-as-a-Service offering. Adjusted EBITDA increased 23% year-over-year and was up 33% FX consistent basis. Adjusted EBITDA margin rate was 23%. The remarkable margin expansion from the previous year can be credited to the reduction in direct costs, particularly in expenses related to fuel and components as well as the increase in the higher-margin recurring revenue stream. The bottom of the slide shows our self-service banking segment key metrics. On the left, software and services revenue mix was flat. ATM-as-a-Service units increased 293% year-over-year to 17,000 units. We experienced significant growth in India and incremental growth in the United States. The shift to recurring revenue continues to gain traction with ARR up 5% year-over-year. On Slide 14, similar to the view presented on Slide 10 for NCR RemainCo and with similar caveats, this slide showcases the combined segment results for payments and network and self-service banking, which are the segments that will comprise NCR ATMCo after the separation transaction. As I said before, the unallocated revenue and corporate costs are not reflected here. The combined revenue for these segments increased $24 million or 3% year-over-year as reported and 6% adjusted for currency. The combined adjusted EBITDA was up 10% year-over-year adjusted for FX, with an adjusted EBITDA margin rate of 23%. Turning to Slide 15, which describes free cash flow, net debt and adjusted EBITDA metrics to facilitate leverage calculations. As we said before, we generated $209 million of free cash flow in the quarter, driven by higher profitability and an improvement in working capital with the cash conversion cycle improving by 2 days. Our goal to generate $500 million in free cash flow before the separation transaction to reduce financial leverage has been well communicated. We have now generated $400 million of free cash flow over the last 2 quarters and are positioned well to meet our targeted leverage. The slide also displays our net debt to adjusted EBITDA metric, which has improved to a leverage ratio of 3.6x, down from 4.1 in Q1 of 2022, driven by higher profitability and cash generation. We remain well within our debt covenants and have significant liquidity with over $875 million available under our revolving credit facility. We possess a robust balance sheet, ample liquidity and strong financial stability to support our growth and the spin transaction. On Slide 16, we present our second quarter outlook and reaffirm our full year 2023 guidance. For Q2 2023, we expect revenue of $1.9 billion to $2.0 billion, adjusted EBITDA of $340 million to $360 million, and non-GAAP EPS of $0.70 to $0.76. We anticipate generating free cash flow of approximately $50 million. For the quarter, we have assumed a tax rate of 27% to 29%, a share count range of 153 million to 154 million shares, and interest expense of $88 million. For the remaining 2 quarters of 2023, we expect relatively linear sequential quarterly improvements across most financial metrics. With that, back to you, Mike.