Yeah, I have no idea what happened there. At 8k reputation, the user should know better. I'm chalking it up to a mistake. Maybe they accidentally submitted when they were trying to just use our stored drafts feature (uses HTML 5 local storage, so accessible only on the same computer, and never made public).
How long should a self-identified incomplete question be left?
Zero seconds.
Same as how long you should wait before voting to close a question that is unclear or incomplete.
We aren't a public scratchpad. Don't go live unless you're ready. As Patrice commented, you have an infinite amount of time to prepare your question before hitting the "Submit" button.
Should this be flagged & only have a question asked when it is ready to be asked/answered?
Yes, absolutely.
Someone else already flagged it, about an hour ago. I just got around to processing the flag some 10 minutes ago, when I deleted the question outright. (That's why you can't see it anymore.)
Does this user gain any advantage by having a question opened earlier & editing it when ready?
I cannot imagine what. Perhaps an earlier "creation" date, but also clear evidence of what happened in the post timeline/revision history. Also, as ChrisF pointed out, it gives plenty of time for downvotes to roll in. Not to mention the reality of it getting deleted, either by a moderator in response to a flag or by a group of users with deletion privileges.
Fun fact: since this question was deleted by a diamond moderator, the user who posted it is unable to undelete it themselves. Also note that, even if it wasn't deleted by a moderator, you cannot edit self-deleted questions, so the possible abuse vector of posting an incomplete question, deleting it, editing it into shape later, and then undeleting it is actually closed.
A high-reputation user who has a history of high-value contributions is unlikely to trip the automatic question block by having a single question downvoted and deleted, but it certainly doesn't benefit them in any way to do so.