In the second part of my internship, I learned how to build a new set of servers for the company Luxottica, a new Wawa server, and a new Sephora server. The new Wawa servers required us to be able to daisy chain the fans for the hard drives together, so I learned what that term was and how to do it. This new Wawa server also taught me how to put in an aftermarket power supply, which I had never done because all the other server chassis came with a built-in power supply. In this new section, I also learned how to troubleshoot a server if all the components seemed to be alright on the server but something was working right. This was new for me because up until then I just updated the BIOS and implemented the company’s software onto the servers for production, but this time they were having me investigate what could possibly be wrong with the server, and with testing, we realized that the aftermarket network card was not able to connect properly with the Ethernet cable that it was connected to. We also had trouble with a server not being able to turn on, but everything was placed in the proper position, so we had to test the power supply, and it was faulty, so they sent the broken power supply to the inventory control specialist and brought in a new power supply for me to work into the server. I also began learning about QA testing, and I haven’t gotten hands on the actual servers, but we started talking and teaching me about what they look for on and in the machines. They look at whether the chassis and IO shield are properly set and that there are no damages. Then we look at the internals and make sure that all the BIOS is updated and that the proper motherboard settings are in place so that the server can run properly without having the user have issues with the server. Overall, I thought that I learned a lot in the second part of my internship since the last reflection paper I wrote.