You can certainly put hyper-links in the word-processor. I get emails from a company, which I save in Open Office. Part of their address is their web-site - which shows as a blue hyper-link in the document. Clicking on the link takes me straight to the web-site.
To insert a hyper-link into a document... Click Insert, then Hyper-link - then type the link into the box provided, and click OK when done.
Yes. OpenOffice is perfectly legal.
Yes. OpenOffice should be available in the repository for Linux, and is available on OpenOffice's website for Windows.
There are currently 2 visible hyperlinks in this conversation.
You can have a maximum of 2292 columns in an OpenOffice spreadsheet.
OpenOffice 2.4.0 was released on March 27, 2008.
Jambo OpenOffice was created on 2004-12-04.
Virtual, Relative, and Absolute are the three types of hyperlinks.
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.
Some words that rhyme with hyperlinks are drinks, thinks, and jinx.
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).
OpenOffice is developed by developers all around the world under the guidance of Oracle Corporation.
No - OpenOffice does not require registration of any kind.