some people are viewing and commenting [. . .] So its means question is technical and there is chance of solution
This is an invalid conclusion. If people are looking at the question but commenting instead of answering, it means the question is poor.
One common problem is that the question lacks sufficient information to make it possible to answer, forcing people to use the comments to ask for clarification. Incomplete questions are not good questions, and therefore do not deserve upvotes.
Another common problem is that the question is too broad, so people are leaving comments either to (A) help the asker narrow down the question to make it answerable in our format, or (B) be nice and give the asker a hint anyway, even though the question is ultimately doomed (and will be closed). Either way, such questions are not good questions, and do not deserve upvotes.
(Arguably, incomplete questions and those that are too broad do deserve downvotes, but often people are too nice and won't downvote questions like this, especially if they seem like earnest attempts.)
I am thinking about if [. . .] a user can request to viewer that if you think question is good technical then kind vote it up that this question can get more attention.
I'm not sure how you're proposing that such a "request" would be made, but no matter how you spin it (a new "feature", or a whiny comment), this is a bad idea.
Begging for votes does not end well. Often, it backfires and you get downvotes instead. The rest of the time, people just ignore you.
It is also unbecoming. Users with voting privileges know how to use the vote arrows. If they thought the question merited an upvote, then they would have given you one. Unless they are out of votes for the day, in which case, begging wouldn't help, either.
And if begging did work, it would be an abuse of the voting system. Votes on Stack Overflow are used to rate content. If the content is useful and interesting to others, then it should be upvoted. Otherwise, it should not be upvoted. Pretty simple, and in practice, it works.