This invention involves using an alternative driver that is located in a
specified server on the Internet. For example, a person could take a
floppy disk that is not compatible with their computer and transform it
over the Internet through an alternate compatible driver. In order to do
this, a special universal bit reader is located within the server. A
second variant is that a bit reader would be located in a user's computer
and it would be connected to a global server. So, all the files could be
accessed through the Internet. This would allow to read and write data
from/to a disk that was formatted on a different operational system. In
order to solve a problem how to run applications that are not compatible
to the operational system on a computer where this disk was inserted, the
invention teaches the following approach. A universal driver on the
server uses a program that looks for similar applications in a database
server that contains a database of applications from different
operational systems. The universal driver can identify what programs in
the application are needed either reading names of programs on the disk
or it can read a special table in which applications point to programs in
different operational systems.