The words "pythonic," "idiomatic" and "elegant" are just fancy ways of saying "best practice."
While I think the use of the word "pythonic" is legitimate if both parties to the communication fully understand what that term means, it does concern me that folks who don't understand the term might simply throwing the term about, in hopes of provoking a discussion about prettifying code.
Using the term "pythonic" makes the Python tag community insular, if you don't explain what you think it means within the context of your question or answer. In other words, why do you think the code in your question is not pythonic, and why do you think your answer is more pythonic? Otherwise, it's only useful to the asker and answerer (and maybe others in the Python tag). You might as well be using SO as an instant messaging system at that point.
That said, I've seen several such questions, and they always seem to work out well, for whatever reason. Maybe "pythonic" is defined well enough in the Python community that unconstructiveness never arises.
Note that, in the question you linked, neither the asker nor the answerer explained why they thought their version of code was pythonic or not pythonic so, regardless of the outcome of the question, for folks like me whose first language is not Python, the post didn't really advance my understanding of what "pythonic" is, or why it is important.