Sorry, I forgot to mention that while I am getting the same response
to:
# ioreg -l -p IODeviceTree | grep firmware-abi
   | |   "firmware-abi" = <"EFI32">

...my setup basically works fine with Snow Leopard. It required
reinstalling the 64 bit mysql, as well as a great deal of reading and
debugging.

Frankly, the only way to deal with these changes is to geek through
it. In my case, I have hardware, the operating system, Phusion
Passenger, Apache, Ruby, Ruby Gems, Rails, mySQL, assorted custom
plugins and my own application, each with their own revision history
and assorted baggage. I lost a hard drive a couple of days after Snow
was released and had to go from a blank PC formatted disk to a working
development environment in a few days; an adventure I'd rather not
repeat, but it does suggest a possible answer: hard drives are cheap.
If I ever decide to voluntarily make a major change in my application
environment, why not just take out the hard drive that works and put
in a new one? Then I can try any darn thing I want and not jeopardize
(Leopardize?) my working system. Time Machine, here I come...
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