Do you agree with my description of the state of affairs, or is your experience/information different?
Yes, my observation was that software recommendation has a very low amount of traffic. Many questions remain unanswered, which in turn makes asking questions also less profitable and in the end the critical mass to keep Q&A going there might just not be reached. Of course it is far from me to question the existence of any stack exchange.
My impression is also that recommending programming software is not so easy, you actually need to have a certain amount of knowledge to know how well a software library fits a certain purpose, to give a useful specific recommendation. In the end, people tend to try different frameworks/libraries/tools anyway and judge how well they fit their purposes and that's what they should do anyway.
Maybe giving specific recommendations does not scale so well. There is certainly a demand for general listings of programming related software (see for example http://cssframeworks.org/, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_parser_generators, https://github.com/akullpp/awesome-java, https://alternativeto.net/software/visual-studio/ and many more) but they would not be a good fit for Q&A (it was tried in the beginning, but didn't work).
What, if anything, would you suggest be done to get more experienced SO eyeballs on software recommendation questions?
If there are actually people interested in answering programming software recommendations which are specific enough to be answerable in Q&A and if the only problem of the software recommendations stack exchange is low amount of traffic, then it might make sense to integrate programming software recommendations in StackOverflow. It would increase the amount of traffic, remove some entry barriers, but might also increase demand for curation, closing those questions where people do not state their requirements.
It's not unheard of, Mathematics for example allows book recommendations if they state their specific requirements. However, the whole thing would need the agreement of both, the software recommendation and the StackOverflow communities. That may not be very likely.
(The non-programming software recommendations of software recommendations might also find a new home at SuperUsers, if we are at it.)
Otherwise I don't see much that can be done. Sure, a bit of advertisement on StackOverflow Meta might have a little impact by making people more aware of the possibility, but that's it.
That might change in the future, if the company decides to integrate technical exchanges more. That might include the programming software recommendations part. They, including the CEO, talked about it in the past months. It would not be clear, if the community will embrace it though, if it ever comes.