Apple Retail.
You do NOT need to know computers to be a specialist. They are looking for a mindset, an attitude first. The rest will be taught. There are no commissions, so your pay is a reasonable hourly rate. There are people who have worked as retail for over 15 years. The benefits are the same as what is offered corporate, and I believe part-time employees get access to the healthcare plans as well as full time. A very few get tapped to go to corporate in some capacity (I know of some who ended up in business sales, others who actually joined the quality team that supports engineering in Cupertino).
Apple also offers Genius and Creative roles (Genius is tech support, Creative is something of a teacher/community support which is a huge initiative on the part of Corporate.
For store management, Apple tends to hire from without. There used to be a "management track" but very rarely did I see anyone get promoted from within to a store manager.
If you look at Apple's website as far as retail, you'll also see there is a "remote customer care" kind of position where you can work from home fielding support inquiries.
Apple's philosophy on selling is the "soft sell." You simply answer questions and be helpful. Eventually the customer will buy the product, then the "halo effect" takes over. I believe there are sales metrics, but they are designed around the "soft sell" approach.
If you are able to promote into Genius, this can usually be spun into an IT job at a future point. I've seen Creatives go on to teach, but generally those folks were either out of work teachers or had degrees but no opportunity -- you don't NEED a teaching degree to become a Creative though. MOST open positions are for Specialists though.