A question like this would have been closed in a heartbeat in the olden days. But not anymore, it is hard to close it today.
There's history behind this that's relevant. The two site founders, Jeff Atwood and Joel Spolsky, had very different ideas what kind of questions should be on topic for SO. They talked about it at length in their early pod-casts, they never agreed. Jeff Atwood crystallized his opinion in this blog post, core idea was to keep only questions that are high quality, delete the cruft.
Joel Spolsky however believes that any question is on topic, as long as it hasn't been asked before. He crystallized his opinion in the infamous How to move the turtle in Logo question. Actually deleted by Jeff Atwood (he hated it with a passion) but restored by Tim Post.
When Jeff Atwood left the company in early 2012, Joel Spolsky transformed SO to match his vision. Instrumental were the "Summer of Love" campaign he started 6 months later and the removal of reasons from the close dialog a year later that made it easy to remove sand.
This had a very drastic impact on the site; there's a wholeheckofalot of sand around today and very few pearls to find. SO experienced geometric growth in the Atwood years, which ground to a halt in fall of 2013. Many community experts drastically scaled down their contributions or stopped posting completely. Google no longer ranks SO pages like it used to do. Vampire sites that copy SO content often rank closely or higher.
It did empower more SO users to ask questions; it's much easier now that there's no need for showing research or understanding of the problem. These users are also a voting force: any meta proposal that tries to do something about the flagging quality of Q+A is quickly voted into the ground. Users want a forum, not a wiki.
Turns out that Spolsky was right and Atwood was wrong. Sad, isn't it?