I worked at ReyRey in 2007 repairing computers. Weirdest place I ever worked. I wanted to make some cash for a flat panel TV for my apartment I'm an engineer, so the aptitude test, which surprised me, was no big deal.I started the next week.
I vividly remember getting my first computer. They didn't really tell me much instruction-wise other than these were computers for car lots. I opened up this computer case, and I'm sure had a very confused look. One of my new co-workers asked "What's the problem? You look confused. They told us you were smart."
"The problem", I said, " Is I'm not sure what this is" as I pointed to a port on the motherboard. "I think it might be an ISA port, but I've never actually seen one." The other workers seemed surprised. "It's an ISA port, you're right" , he said. "No way. I read about these once in a computer history class but, why on Earth would you repair this? It's junk, at least 20, maybe 25 years old." The team proceeded to explain that the systems were leased, and unless the customer wanted to pay for an upgrade, they would just service it and send it back. They had 286 computers, a product of the early 1980's, being serviced. With time I saw some newer late 90's systems come through. I never could figure out why they would pay me $11 an hour to sand cases, run diagnostics and swap out parts on a computer that could have been replaced by the cheapest POS off the shelf. The software could have been emulated and serial interface ports were still a thing, so I never understood the hangup.