As with the rest of IO::Handle, the advantage is in being able to use a standard idiom of lexical references and method calls -- if you're accustomed to using object techniques, it's awkward for one part of your program to suddenly switch to a different idiom of barewords and builtins.
Given that some people find IO::Handle useful, the question about why it's missing the binmode method is perfectly reasonable.
In reply to Re^2: Object-oriented interface for binmode
by simonm
in thread Object-oriented interface for binmode
by ambrus
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