I finally solved my issue.
I figured that the freezes were interrupt-related when I installed IRQBalance 
on my box and a freeze happened few seconds after the daemon had started. Then 
I discovered that nVidia drivers have an internal IRQ manager (possibly to 
distribute the GPU load over multiple cores. Why they didn't use Linux IRQ 
infrastructure is a mystery to me).
Luckily, while looking for a means to force IRQ assignment to a single CPU, i 
found a thread on Ubuntu forums about "rescheduling interrupts" and how this 
practice had become very aggressive in the late kernels, especially when CPU 
load was mid to low.
They suggested a fix, which I tried, and my box has been rock stable since that 
precise moment, which was about two weeks ago, with Compiz on full-time.
If someone wishes to try it, here is the command line (you must enter it as 
root, not with sudo):

echo 1 > /sys/devices/system/cpu/sched_mc_power_savings

I had some problems as root, too (the command was successful but the
system file remained unchanged, as showed by "cat
/sys/devices/system/cpu/sched_mc_power_savings" which resulted in 0
instead of 1), so I rebooted in a fail-safe environment and successfully
applied the change.

-- 
nvidia with compiz and with dual core freeze
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/151382
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