No, those are definitely not the same question. I don't know what the close voter was thinking. Maybe they just had a momentary brain fart or something.
In principle, the thing to do in such cases is simply to vote to reopen the question. Unfortunately, this sends it into the reopen review queue, where IME the success rate for even "obviously" mistaken closures like this one seems pretty close to negligible.* And if the review task gets completed as "Leave Closed" (as seems to have happened in this case), the odds are pretty low that anyone else would just randomly stumble across the question and vote to reopen it before your vote times out.
In practice, more effective ways to get a mistakenly closed question reopened include:
Posting about the situation on meta, like you did here. This will attract lots of extra eyeballs to the question, and if it's really not a duplicate, there's a decent chance that it will get reopened.
Asking for help on chat, e.g. in the SOCVR room. Some of the folks there can have a pretty high bar for question quality, but if you can clearly and succintly argue why the closure was inappropriate, it can be an effective way to get the necessary number of votes in.
In cases like this, where the question was closed by a single gold badge holder or a moderator, you can @ping the closing user in a comment and let them know you think the closure was mistaken. (Yes, this works even if their username doesn't appear in the tab completion list.) If they agree, they can also reopen the question singlehandedly.
Finally, while I'm a bit hesitant to suggest this as a general course of action, I should note for the sake of completeness that I've had some degree of success in the past with politely worded custom moderator flags. Given that the ♦ mods have quite a lot of work on their hands, however, you really shouldn't do this unless you've already tried other, more standard methods first, and really believe that the situation is not easily resolvable by the ordinary community-based moderation mechanisms.
*) In my admittedly limited and anecdotal experience, the major problem with the reopen review queue seems to be that it's flooded with huge numbers of autoflagged questions that have absolutely no reason to ever be reopened. As a result, many reviewers there tend to get into the habit of automatically clicking "Leave Closed" unless the question is obviously of very high quality (which usually means that it's an audit).
As an illustration of the low success/decline rate in the reopen review queue, this SEDE query I made shows that 331 questions have been successfully reopened via review since the beginning of this year, while 4,445 reopen reviews have ended with the question being left closed. That's less than one in 14 completed reviews resulting in the question actually being reopened.
(During the same time period, 393 reopen reviews were invalidated as inconclusive for some reason, presumably e.g. because the question was deleted while it was under review or was reopened by a gold badge holder from outside review. These numbers should exclude most audits, although filtering those out on SEDE is kind of tricky, as I've discussed here on meta.SE.)