baljemmett: If you have succesfully used a voltage supervisor as UVLO with a buck/boost-regulator and a LiPo battery, please share your experiences. :-) Any thoughts on the oscillation thing I was wondering about in the OP?
Ah - I deleted my earlier post because it seemed pointless after re-reading the thread! Basically I have exactly that breadboarded up at the moment for experimentation; I'm using a REG710 buck/boost to get 3.3V from a LiPo cell. Since it'll happily work well below the cell's minimum voltage and I didn't want to rely on the cell protection circuit, I'm driving the regulator's enable pin with an MCP111-300 so it cuts out at 2.93V; as an added bonus this means I can hang an LED between Vin and the enable line to act as a 'terminally low battery' indicator.
It seems to work very nicely; quiescent current draw is about 65uA when the regulator's up and running, or about 1uA when it's in low-battery shutdown (plus the current through the warning LED if fitted, of course). Of course you'd need something a bit beefier than the REG710 (limited to 30mA), so that quiescent current figure is probably useless, but I'd guess it's a reasonable ballpark figure.
Regarding oscillation, unfortunately I haven't managed to characterise the behaviour in that much detail yet. I've been doing my tests from a bench PSU which doesn't offer massively precise setting of the output voltage (just a single-turn pot), but I've verified it cuts off at the expected voltage on the way down and seems to have a small amount of hysteresis (about 0.1V) which should prevent any problems. At the weekend I'll probably try it out on a real battery, but since the one I intend to use has a 2000mAh capacity and the entire system is drawing less than 1mA on average I shall have to come up with a safe way to run it down before I can get to the interesting section of the discharge curve!
The other part of the battery circuitry I've got in mind is a MAX1555 for charging; I'm not sure if it's quite what I need (to be honest, I'd intended to use the MCP73832 in the project I originally wanted the battery for!), but I needed something that explicitly supported leaving the system load connected whilst charging the battery. Hopefully I'm not going to blow myself to smithereens with it...