The general proposition that others can edit Answers, add context for links and thus rescue them from deletion, has many precedents. For example see this Meta post by Jeff Atwood from 2012:
Others have edited your answer to include context from the link, so I undeleted it.
I think this specific case is an Answer that could be saved with a modest amount of editing. The mention of "Fielding's thesis" is probably enough for a determined Google searcher to reconstruct a link that went 404, but the other link has no such hope of reconstruction. [NB: In the course of editing and providing context I discovered the author of "How I explained REST to my wife" (someone other than the author of the SO Answer) has tried to remove it from the web, and I gave up on trying to quote from it.]
If it were left to me, I would preemptively make a generous quote from the "how I explained it to my wife" material and provide a fuller citation for Fielding's thesis.
My threshold is whether the Answer includes enough context for a Reader to judge whether a link is worth pursuing, and I think the Answer meets that test. Providing more context, to insure against the chance of links going dead, is worthwhile, but deletion for failure to do is much like tossing out the baby with the bathwater.
For reference our Help Center FAQ says this about using links in Answers:
Links to external resources are encouraged, but please add context around the link so your fellow users will have some idea what it is and why it’s there. Always quote the most relevant part of an important link, in case the target site is unreachable or goes permanently offline.
In the present context I consider the link to Fielding's dissertation "important", but I've chosen for my edit only to quote the title. Some discussion occurs in the Comments below about permission to quote and whether adding substantial quoted material is a radical change. These are reasonable concerns. Overall I'm in favor of Edits that substantially improve Answers, and would rely on fair use as a copyright defense if that were the complaint. Still I have made what I consider quite conservative choices in this instance.
The alternative proposed, to make my own Answer in parallel to the Accepted one, is an approach I've used with some similar situations, e.g. Seeding the Newton iteration for cube root efficiently. In that case my choice was based partly on my own interest in the Question, but also on the fact the Accepted Answer was a one-liner with only a very summary indication of what a Reader would find if the one link were followed. Here I felt the OP did a reasonably good job of describing the relation of the link content to the Question, and why it would be better to cite the on-line resources than to attempt a detailed explanation.