Most users can't do anything about questions and answers under historical lock, besides raise a Meta question about it. Even high-rep users can't even raise any flags on them.
Historical locks are certainly one of the worst things on this Stack Overflow.
There are recurring questions on Meta about what to do with so-called "outdated" answers(*) or what to do with questions that also have potential security vulnerabilities.
The general idea on Stack Overflow is to be able to provide feedback on answers, using comments, downvotes or, as a last resort, edits when there is a problem. Historical locks go against all these principles.
This leaves a couple of options:
Deletion, which can be a bit of a shame, since some of these Q&A have potentially interesting information, even if they don't fit the current rules (remember that SO and its rules have changed over the years).
Re-opening, or at least removing the lock.
(I'll make a potentially controversial suggestion here: simply re-open, but create a new banner that says "This question exists because it has historical significance, but it is not considered a good, on-topic question for this site, so please do not use it as evidence that you can ask similar questions here". With this, we might even be able to add new answers in case there are other ways to achieve the goal suggested in the question.)
To be more specific about the question you're talking about, I'm not quite sure why this was locked or why this was off-topic. The question itself is indeed phrased as a query for external resources, as opposed to direct answers. Yet, it has quite clearly attracted direct answers to a problem that's reasonably clear. I think closure should be evaluated based on whether the whole Q&A makes sense, even if the question itself is a bit wobbly, more so when it happens a year after the question has been asked. If anything, this Q&A looks pretty much like a canonical question in many ways (and canonical questions seem to be the ideal the most fervent curators on this site seem to aim for).
(*) I think "outdated" is relative: it can be useful to some readers to find out how something was done using a version that's not the latest, typically when they're unable to use the latest version.