It looks like IT jobs are the most common, which isn't really all the surprising when talking on an internet forum.
I've done all sorts of jobs, including a variety of auto dealer and parts store minimum-wage jobs starting out, then got a lucky break and did system administration in a large corporate law firm. I was in Assembly night class at the local community college and the network admin was in the class and pretty much brought me on to help them move off diskless 386 workstations onto Windows 95 Pentiums. I guess that dates me a little bit.
He left and his replacement was the one guy in the entire company that I didn't get along well, so I did my two years then moved on to a large international IT outsourcing company and did internal desktop support (and more) for about 8.5 years, and did a ton of "home" support (building PCs, fixing PC/network problems, etc) on the side.
I returned from our 10-day WDW vacation in January 2007, and on my second day back, was told that they were downsizing me. This was rather a shock as I was pretty sure that I had one of the most secure jobs - it was a big shock to the people in the building that I exclusively supported! I was given two weeks to find another job in the company and did but my manager (who had only recently become my manager, and didn't know me from Adam) pretty much blocked me from getting it. He had to let
someone go and he didn't want to let any of the people he
did know go, so I was pretty much forced out through no fault of my own and despite the best efforts of the people I supported (including some powerful folks), I found myself unemployed.
I considered starting my own company, but with two car payments and a child (and attempts to get one more), I decided that I couldn't take the risk.
The job market is pretty lousy in upstate NY, and it took me almost six months to find another job. As it is with these type of things, I ended up with two offers at once (and another that would be an offer in another week or two.) I ended up moving from a 125,000-employee company to a 5-employee company - how's that for a change? We do IT outsourcing, which includes everything from building servers, managing networks, web hosting, premise wiring, fiber optic pulling and termination, A/V installations... pretty much anything you can think of. I can spend one day troubleshooting Exchange issues and the next pulling cable in the mud at a nuclear power plant. (That's one of our biggest clients, so I have a bunch of nuke training now, too!) I don't really enjoy the cable-pulling too much, but the job pays reasonably well and it's
certainly not boring!
I've told the photography history before so I won't go over it all again here (this message is too long already!), suffice to say - bought a K1000 after high school, used it exclusively and happily until buying a digital camera relatively late, had two PnSs and am now on my third DSLR.