No. At some point, you are going to need access to the internet to get it. OpenOffice is not distributed through traditional channels, like at a computer store. You need to either download it, or order it online from a CD distributor for a small fee.
yes but you need an emulator
Newer version will automatically try to uninstall any previous version.
Yes. OpenOffice is perfectly legal.
OpenOffice has several advantages to other office suites. 1. Unlike Microsoft Office or iWork, OpenOffice is available free of charge. 2. Unlike Microsoft Office or iWork, OpenOffice is open-source, and free to modify. 3. Unlike GNOME Office, KOffice, or Siag Office, OpenOffice is written in Java. This means that it does not need to be ported to other operating systems; it should run out-of-the-box on any system with a Java runtime.
Yes. OpenOffice should be available in the repository for Linux, and is available on OpenOffice's website for Windows.
OpenOffice 2.4.0 was released on March 27, 2008.
You can have a maximum of 2292 columns in an OpenOffice spreadsheet.
Jambo OpenOffice was created on 2004-12-04.
Only you know which operating system your version of OpenOffice is installed on. The version of OpenOffice you're using, can be found by - opening any document, clicking the 'help' button, and selecting the 'About OpenOffice' option.
Yes, Openoffice was designed specifically for tablet use. It runs on the Android OS but may need an additional download of a file converter from the Android market place.
There should be no problem running OpenOffice on Windows 10 and OpenOffice has always been able to read Word files (there may be problems writing some of those files back out as the same Word format due to licensing issues, but if you intend on switching to OpenOffice you will be saving as OpenOffice format not Word).