That post was an answer, even in its original state. It was on that basis that I declined your flag.
Although not of an especially high quality, the answer was of the "teach a man to fish" variety: it pointed them to a source that they could use to ascertain whether any new web technology is supported in a browser, which not only answered the original question, but also answered a much larger problem.
As an independent action, I decided that the answer could be improved slightly by editing it, so I did that. The edit and the flag decline were not connected, other than temporally (your flag brought the answer to my attention).
Honestly, that an answer omits a trivial, implied phrase like "the API is not supported" does not mean it is not an answer. It was quite obvious to 5 upvoters what the answer meant, and it was quite obvious to me. I'm not even a web developer. So yeah—in cases where adding a trivial, implied phrase to an answer is necessary to convert it into an answer in your eyes, you should edit instead of flagging.
I also tend to share Brad Larson's extremely unpopular opinion regarding extremely old, upvoted answers. Obviously a number of people have found them useful, so it's arguably harmful to the site for a moderator to simply delete them. When the links are dead, and that's all there was to the answer, I will generally delete it. But if the answer still retains all of its original value, then I'm probably going to choose to keep it around.
But before y'all fire up the flamethrowers, I'll point out that I processed some 300+ flags yesterday and marked the overwhelming majority of NAA/VLQ flags as "helpful", deleting the flagged answers in the process. It's not like I'm choosing to keep around most of what gets flagged. This was, however, a pretty clear case where deletion appeared to me to be counter-indicated. If it possible to add value, rather than destroy it, then I strongly prefer the former.
Another fun fact: the Low Quality Posts review queue was holding at a very manageable quantity all day yesterday, and there were several occasions where posts that I clicked through to from the moderator flag dashboard had already been deleted by community members through review. This is good. That answer was in the queue for about an hour and didn't get any reviews. So, plenty of active reviewers, only a small number of posts to be reviewed—the logical conclusion is that reviewers were skipping it because they were unsure. Another good argument not to delete it.