Microsoft Office software has supported the Open Document Format (ODF) for several years and Microsoft supply converters for earlier (before Office 2007) versions of Office that did not support the format.
Yes it can. Open Office can work with MS Office documents.
Open office will read the file without any problems. You can either save any changes as a Word document or convert it to Open Office writer.
Yes - OpenOffice documents are saved in 'open document format' - which means they should be readable by most programs.
Yes - OpenOffice will read files from many of the popular programs.
Yes. Here is a tutorial from Microsoft on the best way to go about it: http://support.microsoft.com/kb/315757
Yes
Open Office is designed to be compatible with Microsoft's Office software and it can handle most Word documents.
If you mean Microsoft Word than this is a text processing program.
word processing software.
Both .doc and .docx formats are native to Microsoft Word, however they can be read and modified by a number of compatible word processing programs. These programs include Google Docs, Kingsoft Writer, Openoffice Writer and Libreoffice Writer. Keep in mind, however, that documents written with Microsoft Word may have some issues when being imported to other programs. You can try to open the document in one of these compatible programs to see if everything looks okay. If it does, you can usually continue to use that program to edit the document without issues. In addition, you can save documents from these programs in a Microsoft Word format (doc or docx) and they will usually render correctly in Microsoft Word.
Microsoft Word is a word processing program that you can use to create, edit, format, and save documents
Yes. There is a Pages app and a group of Microsoft Office Apps.
Yes.
Things like Microsoft Word, Openoffice Word processor. They're basically anything you can change font, type in, or edit a word document.
Microsoft paint is a software program that you draw in.
There is no such thing as Microsoft World. If you were actually referring to Microsoft Word, its main purpose is to allow people to create and edit documents.
Most likey, yes.
I cant find any concrete reason for the logo. However - in my opinion, it signifies the 'freedom' aspect of OpenOffice - in that you, the end-user is able to modify the program to suit your needs. This is in direct contrast to Microsoft, who do not licence end-users to edit their software !