- <h2>Starting Ardour on the command line (Linux)</h2>
-<p>Like (almost) any other program on Linux, Ardour can be started on the command line.</p>
-<ul>
-<li>type the following command in a terminal window<br/><pre>ardour3</pre>
-</li>
-<li>to start Ardour with an existing session, type the following command in a terminal window<br
-/><pre>ardour3 /path/to/session</pre>
-<p>replacing /path/to/session with the actual path to your session. You can specify either the session folder or any session file inside the folder (including snapshots).</p>
-</li>
-<li>to start Ardour with a new, named session, type the following command in a terminal
-window<br/ ><pre>ardour3 -N /path/to/new/session</pre>
-<p>replacing /path/to/new/session with the name of the folder where you want the session stored.
+<h2>Starting Ardour on the command line (Linux)</h2>
+<p>Like (almost) any other program on Linux, Ardour can be started on the command line.
+Type the following command in a terminal window:
</p>
-</li>
-</ul>
+<code>ardour3</code>
+<p>To start Ardour with an existing session:</p>
+<code>ardour3 /path/to/session</code>
+<p>replacing /path/to/session with the actual path to your session. You can specify either the session folder or any session file inside the folder (including snapshots).</p>
+<p>To start Ardour with a new, named session:</p>
+<code>ardour3 -N /path/to/new/session</code>
+
<h3>Other Command Line Options</h3>