Nope, still not telling me anything useful, just stating that's a way to look at it.
What can looking at it that way DO FOR ME?
And what does thinking the power flows in the cable do for you? If all you want to see is voltage and current, you don't need that information either.
When you have to power a 1kW heater, do you look for a cable capable of sustaining 1kW of power? You just need to dissipate the power associated with the Poynting vector impinging in the cable.
Which makes me think of a way to verify if power comes from... outer space. Nope, surface charge will prevent that and make sure the Poynting vector, as soon as we cross the lateral surface of the resistor, will be directed inward in a uniform way (in hindsight it's logical if we consider that the E field inside is constant and directed along the axis).
Off the top of my head, knowing the Poynting vector field might help knowing which part of your heater will be hotter. If the battery-resistor circuit is not symmetric the power getting into the resistor (to be dissipated) will not follow a symmetric spatial distribution. In the improbable case you can have a perfectly homogeneous resistor, it should be possible to see certain parts of the heater glow more, while others will glow less. I wonder if its doable or if the process of redistribution in the material will make this effect drown in a sea of thermal uniformity.Do you have any comment on how quantum field theory views this? or do you think it's bunk?
You don't need to go as far as QFT to muddy the waters. Even plain quantum mechanics can make things so complicated that you won't be able to have intuitive insights. For example: what makes the above heater glow? A classical physicist would say it's the collisions of electrons with the material's atomic lattice. A quantum physicist will object to that: what electrons? There's a collective wave function there, not a bunch of identifiable electrons. And if you have a perfectly spaced lattice that wave won't interact at all, so it can't be the lattice. Turns out it's imperfections in the lattice and the mechanism behind the transferal of energy is electron-phonon interaction. You need to throw in more than half Ashcroft Mermin to explain why your heater glow.
Back to QFT. My understanding is that more advanced theories can extend our knowledge to explain
more of what we observe. So the question is: will QFT give different values for the electric and magnetic field in the space around the wires? I doubt it. These fields can be measured, so if QFT is that good of a theory they say (and it is) it will agree with experimental measures.
Do you think that the value of the electric and magnetic field in the middle of a circuit with battery and resistor will be different from what is predicted by classical ED? (I am not talking about vacuum fluctuation, but fields of the order of magnitude we can measure with 'ordinary' instruments).