Pedantism is a quality one would expect to see frequently in the active user base of a site like SO, and the attention to detail sets this site apart from the user boards and other sites it's replaced, so don't hate on us for caring about minutiae.
The answer under discussion is difficult to analyze because the question itself is not very good. It does a very poor job defining the scope (what OS? what platform?), the technologies involved (browser? node?) and the rubric by which to judge answers (performance? readability?) which, even if one does not know the answer, one could reasonably assume would be many.
This really becomes a question of how much new information one must add to an answer when other answers have already been posted. Typically, the accepted way to add additional context, warnings or minor tweaks is via a comment. However, sometimes there's enough additional information to warrant a new answer. Where exactly that line falls is pretty tough to call.
You can be sure that any additional information that could easily fit within a comment is probably not going to be well received. That's as good a rule of thumb as any other I've seen.
If you are going to post a whole new answer to an already crowded field of answers, you had really better post something worth the additional scrolling and reading. The answer in question definitely falls into a gray area. It's adding just a tiny bit more than what you could fit into a comment (where would you even put that comment?) but it's doubtful that there's enough to justify a whole new answer.
Personally, I find that answer to be just useful enough to allow, but I really wish the author had included a lot more content. Others are going to look at that answer and find it completely useless. Lesson: I'd recommend against using that answer as an example or model for future posts.
In summary, it's better to add wings to a unicorn:
Then a horn to Ralph Wiggum: