My first thought whenever I see an "is this possible" question is that the OP simply didn't do any research. They somehow found out about Stack Overflow and though "I bet they'll know."
Now, like fbueckert said, nothing is inherently wrong with that. Of course you'd want to exert as little effort as possible, because that's the most efficient thing to do... for you. You need to remember that potential answerers are also people.
Answering questions here isn't anyone's job (except maybe on Meta when employees respond to questions); it's a volunteer position. Instead of you doing the research, you're now asking others to essentially do your work for you. Maybe someone is willing to put in that effort for you, but most people probably aren't.
Then there's the issue of usefulness. The whole reason Stack Exchange even exists is so there's a place with questions and answers that anyone could potentially use for their benefit. A question asking "is this possible" can really only receive an answer that says "yes" or "no." That "yes" might be accompanied by a link to some solution, but since it's not asked for in the question, it might not be provided. Imagine how annoying it would be if you searched
can I add pins to a map in Xamarin.Forms and can these pins be seen in an iPhone 7 and a Galaxy S9?
in Google, and you found the exact question title on Stack Overflow, with an answer count of 1 or more, only for them all to say
yes
"Yes" what? How do you do it? It's simply not that helpful to anyone but the person who was asking it before they actually started trying to do it. You might have the motivation to keep researching and eventually figure out a solution, but Stack Overflow is there so you don't necessarily have to do all that.
Then there's the problem that Erik brought up. The answer to "can I do this" is always technically "yes." It might not be feasible, but it is always possible.
Instead of asking "can I do this," do what Sterling suggested. Assume it's possible, and then ask how to do it. That makes it better for you—because there's a chance someone knows the solution, or at least knows of a library or other FOSS project that does it—and it makes it better for anyone else who has the same question.