Tuesday 18 November 2014

తెలుగు బూతు కథలు 25-50 stories Telugu Hot Stories Index

వాడు ఆంటీ దగ్గర కి వచ్చి ఆంటీ తొడల మధ్య న
నిలబడి వాడి మెుడ్డని ఆంటీ పూకు మీద పెట్టి రాస్తూ
మెుడ్డ గుండు ని ఆంటీ పూకు రెమ్మల కి తగిలించి
రుద్దుతూ ఆంటీ సల్లు పట్టుకుని పిసుకుతుుు వదినా నీ
పూకు ని కూడా కసిగా దెంగి నీ పూకు లో కార్చేస్తా
అంటూ ఒక్క సారి గా కసుక్కున ఆంటీ పూకు లోకి
మెుడ్డ ని నెట్టి వదినా నీ పూకు ఎంత కసిగా ఉందే
అంటూ అలాగే ఆంటీ మీద పడుకుని ఆంటీ పెదాలు,
చీకుతూ, మెుడ్డని గట్టిగా ఊపుతూ ఆంటీ సల్లు
చీకసాగాడు.
























 వదినా ఊ ఊ ఊ అబ్బా ఎంత కసిగ దెంగుకుంటున్నారే మీ
ఇద్దరూ, వదినా ఉమ్మ్ ఊం మ్మ్ అంటూ ఆంటీ పెదాలు
చీకుతూ నాలుక ని ఆంటీ నోట్లో కి తోసి ఆంటీ ఎంగిలి
అంతా తాగుతూ వదినా ఆ కారిపోతోంది. నీ పూకు ని
కసిగా దెంగనా ఊ ఊ అన్నాడు.


  






















 for purchases with electronic gadgets.
The Apple iPhone6 and Apple Watch promise consumers a more secure way to make card payments at checkout registers. It also is expected to make credit-card and debit-card transactions faster and easier for shoppers at bricks-and-mortar stores and when making online purchases.
That, said industry executives, should lead to more payments taking place over electronic networks, and fewer cash transactions.
"If paying by phone is easier for the consumer, it is first and foremost likely to displace cash," said Jud Linville, who runs Citigroup Inc. 's credit-card business.
Card issuers will pay Apple a small per-transaction fee to participate in Apple Pay, which means they would make less money than they would with a regular swipe at the cash register, according to people familiar with the arrangement. The companies are betting that they will more than make up that cost as the volume of electronic payments increases, these people said.
But the credit-card industry has jumped on technologies that have fizzled in the past. What's more, the Apple gadgets will work only in stores where merchants have upgraded their equipment to accept the technology.
While credit and debit cards represent more than half of the purchases made for retail goods and services in the U.S., cash continues to dominate in small transactions. A recent consumer survey conducted by the Federal Reserve found that cash represented 66% of transactions under $10 and 58% of transactions under $25. When the transaction was more than $50, cash was used in less than 20% of the payments.
The idea of paying for small purchases with a phone may be a tough sell for people like iPhone user Alfred J. Zera who aren't ready to give up a stash of cash.
Mr. Zera, a 36-year-old plumber from New York City, is looking forward to upgrading to the new iPhone and thinks he would likely use the payment feature instead of his credit card. But when it comes to small items, "I'm a big cash guy," he said.



 
  







 ఆంటీ దెంగరా బాగా దెంగు, నా పూకు లో నీ రసాలు
కుమ్మరించు ఊ ఊ అంటూ తన చేతుల తో వాడి పిర్రలు
పట్టుకుని నొక్కుతూ తన మెుత్తని పైకి ఆడిస్తూంది.
వాడు వదినా ఆ ఊ ఊ ఊ ఊ అని ఒక్క పోటు గట్టిగా
పొడిచేసరికి ఆంటీ పూకు కండరాలు అన్నీ ఒక్క చోట కి
వచ్చినట్టు గా అయ్య ఆంటీ పూకులోంచి రసాలు ధారగా
కారిపోతున్నాయ.





  






  





 ఒరే అదీ దెంగరా నీ వదిన పూకు ని దెంగు ఊ ఊ
అంటూ వాడి పిర్రల ని కసిగా పిసికేస్తూంది.
వాడు వదినా కారిపోయంది అని ఊపి ఊపి అలా ఆంటీ మీద
పడుకుండి పోయ ఆంటీ పెదాలు చీకుతూ ఆంటీ బుగ్గలు
కొరికి అలా ఆంటీని హత్తుకు పోయాడు. ప్రక్కన నేను
మత్తుగా కళ్ళు మూసుకుని పడుకున్నా.
ఆంటీ అబ్బా ఇంక లేరా తొడలు, పిర్రలూ బంక బంకగ
చేసి పడేసావ్ వెధవా అంత కసిగా దెంగావేంటి రా అంది.
వాడు ఆంటీ మీద నుంచి లేచి ప్రక్కనే కూర్చున్నాడు.










  







 






Apple could have been more transparent and said that the typical base price was $649 or more. But that would have spoiled the fun.
It turns out that upgrading an iPhone every two years on a 24-month phone service contract, as I’ve been doing, doesn’t cost $199. This year it will cost me at least $649. In fact, it could cost considerably more than that if you add the miscellaneous charges that your phone carrier may impose, and the discounts that it may withhold.
Keeping your costs under control may take some work:  I discovered that a relatively new option — buying a phone on the installment plan from AT&T, my current carrier — turns out to be much cheaper for me than getting the phone through a service contract, the way I’d done it before. I didn’t know that until I crunched the numbers. 
“I think it’s fair to say that people wouldn’t be as motivated to go out and buy if they thought it was a $650 purchase,” said Craig Moffett, senior analyst and a partner at MoffettNathanson Research. “And if you look at the marketing issues and the accounting issues, it’s fair to conclude that the companies have a strong incentive to obfuscate about pricing.”

for purchases with electronic gadgets.
The Apple iPhone6 and Apple Watch promise consumers a more secure way to make card payments at checkout registers. It also is expected to make credit-card and debit-card transactions faster and easier for shoppers at bricks-and-mortar stores and when making online purchases.
That, said industry executives, should lead to more payments taking place over electronic networks, and fewer cash transactions.
"If paying by phone is easier for the consumer, it is first and foremost likely to displace cash," said Jud Linville, who runs Citigroup Inc. 's credit-card business.
Card issuers will pay Apple a small per-transaction fee to participate in Apple Pay, which means they would make less money than they would with a regular swipe at the cash register, according to people familiar with the arrangement. The companies are betting that they will more than make up that cost as the volume of electronic payments increases, these people said.
But the credit-card industry has jumped on technologies that have fizzled in the past. What's more, the Apple gadgets will work only in stores where merchants have upgraded their equipment to accept the technology.
While credit and debit cards represent more than half of the purchases made for retail goods and services in the U.S., cash continues to dominate in small transactions. A recent consumer survey conducted by the Federal Reserve found that cash represented 66% of transactions under $10 and 58% of transactions under $25. When the transaction was more than $50, cash was used in less than 20% of the payments.
The idea of paying for small purchases with a phone may be a tough sell for people like iPhone user Alfred J. Zera who aren't ready to give up a stash of cash.
Mr. Zera, a 36-year-old plumber from New York City, is looking forward to upgrading to the new iPhone and thinks he would likely use the payment feature instead of his credit card. But when it comes to small items, "I'm a big cash guy," he said.
 

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