N/A
The age of a question should not come into account when deciding on duplicates.
Of course, I do not mean that your question is bad or stupid; we all know that technology moves forward and as a result the answers from yesterday might no longer be applicable today or might not be as efficient.
However, age is a poor criterion to differentiate questions on. SO, as a Q&A site, aims at providing answers immediately, the edge case where the question is not already answered or cannot be found should be eliminated as much as possible.
In the specific case of old vs new questions, old questions have an inherent advantage in today's search engines (for better or worse), thus if the only difference in the question is the date... it's not worth asking a new question (it might be worth posting a new answer to the existing question, however).
Also, if you have two identical questions, which one should you answer? Both? That's fishy!
It is worth asking a new question if it has novel elements that the old did not: most likely you are prompted to ask a new question because the specifics of the old question do not apply. This means that your situation is different, you need to characterize this difference (language/compiler/library versions for example) in the question and maybe with tags.
With the difference characterized, your question is not a duplicate, even if the other one was asked an hour ago.
Note: as mentioned in the comments, if you ask a newer version of a question, it is worth linking to the older version why a brief of the difference with yours; this way, if anyone stumbles on your question but is more interested by the older version, it's just a click away... and it may prevent your question being closed as duplicate.