Dear Jammie,
I've owned a digital camera for at least 8 years now. Those things really eat up AA batteries. The problem is, they don't drain them all the way down. They just drain them enough so that the camera doesn't flash with them anymore. Why do digital cameras do that?? I never had this problem back in my 35mm days. A month or so ago, I purchased a rechargeable battery pack and a docking station for my camera which is working nicely so far.
My real problem is this - I've got nearly 100 AA batteries sitting in a jar in my kitchen. What the hell do I do with them all? The battery tester still shows them as good. They work in other things that aren't digital cameras. But I don't have much else that requires them. A few remote controls, maybe. But those never run down. What should I do with 100 AA batteries?
Dear rbcp,
Digital cameras clearly need more battery uNF than other things. They're snobby.
As for your 100 batteries... you should definitely keep a few. Things like remote controls, toys and vibrators will always need replacing. Maybe go through the expiration dates and only keep the ones you think will last long enough to be used to actually power things.
You can find AA batteries insanely cheap and new on ebay, so forget about selling them. I have some suggestions though:
1. Battery art!
2. Buy 50 battery powered toys for your kids!
3. Line them up like dominoes and tip them over. Hours of fun!
4. Offer them up for free on craigslist. Or you might get a few bucks out of it.
5. You're the most creative prankster I know... any prank I think of to use them will suck... but maybe put weird messages all over them like "Fuck you, whitey!" or "If you found this, you will have good luck for 10 days!" or "If found, please return to Radio Shack" and leave them all over town and see what happens. Maybe you'll make the papers. Or maybe put them in a basket with a blanket and a baby rattle with a sad note and leave them in front of the electronics store and watch what happens. This is totally not my area of expertise, but I have faith in you.
Keep in mind... they aren't really worth anything, so you can always keep a couple and throw them out guilt-free. You have my permission.
Good luck!
Love,
jammie