OpenOffice and LibreOffice are both full office suites used in Linux distributions.
A package manager is a utility to install remove, upgrade, and track the dependencies of software in Linux.
A package manager does as what it says - it manages software packages that make up your installation.
Linux is a stable operating system for using free office software such as LibreOffice. Many varieties of Linux already have LibreOffice installed by default.
Microsoft office
There are many applications with Linux software package equivalents available. Some examples of these applications include Google Chrome and Google Music Manager.
Install your OpenOffice.org package from the package installer (through the RedHat network).If open office is a .org package then you need to install the wine package according to the Linux version you are using,then you can install and run all types of .org packages using the wine application in the Linux OS.
Members of the Linux Documentation Project. Individual package maintainers write manual pages for their software.
Linux wine allows the user to run Windows software when they are using a Linux operating system. One would like to do this if they like how Windows software works rather than the Linux equivalent, for example some people like Microsoft Office products.
Packages are things that you download from a website. When you open the package, you will have the ability to download software.
Examples are software package like MS Office, Adobe Macromedia, and others.
Lots of programs can "download stuff", from web browsers to package managers to BitTorrent clients.
A software package is a single piece of software to do a single job; for example, Microsoft Word. A suite is a collection of related software packages, such as Microsoft Office (which includes Word, Excel, PowerPoint, etc.)