Lately though I just use Eneloops as a kind of no-brainer solution to almost all my battery needs. Granted, some cells are higher capacity, but I love the robustness of Eneloops. I know they'll give me 2000 to 2100 mAh both now and 5 years from now. I lot of the higher capacity cells I've tried just crap out after a couple of years.
That's quite debatable, and it will also depend on *how* the cells are used/
abused. The Lenmar 2000ma standard NiMH AA's I bought, all 8 crapped out on me after a year or less with <50 cycles for a very rough estimate, i'd say it was far fewer but more than say 5-10, at a time when Engergizers were @2300ma. My Maha 1550ma (made in Taiwan says the label) cells are ready to be tossed for lack of ability to hold a charge/drastically reduced capacity and the positive white, terminal end caps look brown from searing heat, they are what about 5-10yrs of use, but not even close to 100 cycles. I'll bet the Eneloops I just got, won't last 5yrs, and if they do, there capacity will be <1/2 orig.
In a lot of devices, headphone amp, old port cassette/radio player, port. small speakers, Edmund Sci, weather station base unit w/remove wireless sensor/transmitter I can let the batteries get so far dead, that my 15min microprocessor controlled Uniross charger will not even charge them- requiring me to use the old Maha 204 charger for initial 'boost' charge (initially putting the batteries into the 204c I get a temp red led flash, then nothing, then have to hold down the discharge button for each channel to get the charger to go into forced charging mode).
After that, say 5min charge, then I can take the cells out, let them sit and cool down before putting them into the 15min charger.