Where the electricity comes into the house, it sits above a concrete pad, the entire house is ungrounded. Where I have the standard 120VAC electrical sockets, there are two wires, and no ground. Nor is the box a good ground. In the boxes where the light switches are, there are two wires, both black.
I made a stink about not have enough grounded plugs before I moved in an our landlord said he'd "fix" it. So he replaced the two prong faceplates with three prong. The third prong is disconnected. I did not discover this until we moved it. The best concession I got from our landlord was that he agreed to put a GFCI in the bedroom where the computer is hooked up so it _might_ be safe from surges. It's the only GFCI outlet in the house. I am sure the house is no where near up to code, and we plan on moving next april when our lease is up.
Does that clarify things? Sorry it's a bit of a rant.
This sounds like my mother's home circa 1940. Nothing is grounded. Not much you can do about it since you are renting. Legally, I don't think the owner is required to "bring to code"....State laws may vary.
Technically, not having grounded outlets is not unsafe (to humans) unless you happen to be using a metal cased electric drill while standing in water, or similar foolishness. Even then the power tool, or grounded device would have to be in some state of disrepair to be "leaking". GFI outlets will add safety in bath and kitchens. But I don't think a GFI can protect equipment from surges. The way they work, they may not even "see" a surge, and are way too slow in action to protect electronics.
Third wire grounding does make a difference when talking about power surges and protection of three wire electronics because most surge protectors dissapate to neutral and the ground.
You can still use X10. You just will not be able to install X10 wall switches for CFL use (you can use two wire X10 wall switches but only with incandescent bulbs). But IMHO it is not a good idea to replace wall switches in a rented facility, especially if you plan on moving soon (< a year). The link I included in previous post is a great, cheap X10 starter kit and requires no wiring changes.