"At this point I suggest that you either keep using the nvidia installer
or that you perform a clean installation of Ubuntu and use only our
packages."

I managed to get the problem solved. I removed the proprietary driver, using 
"sudo nvidia-installer --uninstall".
Next, apt-get install nvidia-current. Then, do an apt-get remove --purge 
nvidia-current. This gets rid of most of the hanging config files, plus it 
spits out a list of "not empty" files and directories, which I manually 
removed. I had to purge xserver-xorg-video-nouveau, too.Then I was able to 
install the driver from gnome (kde still wouldn't start) using jockey.  Then I 
could put back my custom xorg.conf (which is needed to run the two video cards 
in sli configuration). Now all is well with kde, except jockey is unhappy that 
I have a custom xorg.conf. Too bad. It's alive.

By the way, a workaround has been found to get the live cds to boot on
Dell systems. Doing that, I was able to do a "clean" install. What I
found is that all of the video drivers are located in exactly the same
places as on the supposedly corrupt system. So for this system, they are
being installed somewhere other than specified in
https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/nvidia-graphics-
drivers/+bug/548362/comments/37, even in a clean install.

-- 
nvidia-current 195.36.15 + kernel 2.6.32 + dual cards crashes system
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/573557
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