You say that it contains "many technical terms that nobody outside of C++ would understand", but that is precisely the point. It is impossible to understand C++ without knowing these basic terms and understanding what they mean. You can't even search for more information unless you know the correct terms.
As such, it makes sense to introduce these fundamental terms, along with a definition/explanation, in the introductory topic. It just so happens that C++ is a difficult language. No one ever promised it would be easy to program. The alternative would just be showing the "Hello, world" code with no explanation, and I can't see how that would be better for anyone.
It's also worth keeping in mind that the target audience for Stack Overflow itself is "professional and enthusiast programmers". We assume a basic level of technical knowledge, so we do not need to define terms like "file I/O" or "console", because you are expected to come to the table with that knowledge. Documentation on Stack Overflow is not for teaching my grandmother how to program. It's for teaching competent computer users who already know at least one other language (or at least have a basic understanding of one) a new language/tool/concept.
Besides, if you come across something in Documentation that you do not understand, then there is this great Q&A site attached to it that you can use to ask about it. As far as I'm concerned, that's the real innovation here. If all documentation had good Q&A, Stack Overflow would be out of business.
For what it's worth, I recall many moons ago when Documentation was first released to the public, we had an argument some discussion about how to include compilation instructions along with the "Hello, world" example.
The problem is that every compiler and build environment is different, and there's just no way to include a description of even the most common ones. Someone had contributed an explanation of building on Linux using GCC, and then someone else wanted to contribute an explanation of building on Windows using Visual C++, and then someone else wanted to contribute an explanation of building on Windows using MinGW, and on and on. Talk about complicated—installers, file extensions, compiler flags, Makefiles, executing binaries, oh my! And what happens when someone inevitably tries to contribute a how-to on compiling in Turbo C++ because "this is what we use at my school"?
So it was decided that this didn't belong in language documentation. It kind of hurts the "Hello, world" spirit, since you can't actually say hello to the world in C++ without being able to build the C++ code, but again, no one said programming is easy. As a compromise, we have a link to an online push-button compiler, no installation required. And a separate new Compiling and Building topic was created, where examples for each compiler/system can be added. It isn't as good as it being right there in the "Hello, world" topic, but there just isn't any way to do it in the restrictive model of Documentation. If you have a different idea on how to address this impasse, please feel free to suggest it.