Ah, I see what you mean.
HP appears to be breaking that paradigm, however, in that they have UEFI 
firmware that supports "legacy mode" booting, and that they seem to be shipping 
systems with normal MBR-style partition tables that nonetheless have EFI boot 
partitions.
My understanding of how Windows boots is, I think, the same as yours - although 
its legacy boot mode is very similar to EFI boot now, it's still different.  So 
WTF is/are HP and Lenovo and Acer [I think], and... etc. doing?
The existence of this hybrid non-GPT-but-still-EFI firmware and accompanying 
boot process, unless I'm missing some important detail, will require that 
Ubuntu and others abandon their very limited notions of UEFI-compliance and 
allow much greater flexibility.
Meanwhile, I'm thankful that the Ubuntu systems I manage still have the ability 
to boot in 'normal' legacy mode.  (As does the HP 8200 - if you're willing to 
wipe the existing disk, everything works just fine.)

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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/811485

Title:
  EFI SYSTEM PARTITION should be atleast 100 MiB size and formatted as
  FAT32, not FAT16

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