As a laser physicist I find that the photon is very useful. Certainly as an RF antenna engineer you do not require the concept of the photon to do your work! But that is because the photons really are the quantized modes of the electromagnetic field, and each one is very miniscule when working with radio waves.
But Maxwell's equations tell us that electromagnetic waves are equally applicable all up and down the scale of wavelengths/frequencies ... and the energy content of a photon becomes significant at some point! For example, the electronic transitions within atoms and molecules fit the photon picture very well; all of spectroscopy is based on this.
And as energy increases you begin to see more and more "particle" behavior, though it is always there: the typical detector always detects over a small region, point-like, even though the "particle" acts as a wave during transit.
For example, my dissertation research was on ultrafast photo-electron diffraction. I can assure you that electrons have wave properties during the diffraction, but are particles at the detector! The same is true for x-rays. I "see" this behavior in the lab, with my very own detectors.
And yet most people are happy with "an electron is a particle" and "a photon is a wave". We even have people on this site who throw a fit when "wave-particle duality" is brought up. As an experienced physicist I prefer to start with the observed physics of the situation, and then apply a theoretical mesh on top which has predictive power.