The answer to the second part of the question, "is this quirk ever useful?" is perhaps no, as noted by a previous answer, if it is indeed a quirk of the language (Javascript) that true is cast to 1, but that the programmer does not in general view 1 and true (and 0 and false) as the same thing.
If however you have a mental model of 1 being true and 0 being false, then it leads to all sorts of nice boolean techniques that are extremely useful, powerful, and direct. For example, you could increment a counter directly with the result of A > 100, which would increment the counter if A is greater than 100. This technique might be viewed as a quirk or a trick in Java, but in an array or functional language may be idiomatic.
A classic example in the array language APL would be to count the number of items in an array that are (say) greater than 100:
+/A>100
Where if A is the 5 item array 107 22 256 110 3 then:
A>100
yields the 5 item boolean array:
1 0 1 1 0
and summing this boolean result:
+/1 0 1 1 0
yields the final answer:
3
This question is a perfect example of where this technique would be very useful, especially if the problem is generalized to determine if n out of m boolean values are true.
Check if at least two out of three booleans are true