As far as I can see the question was asked 13 years ago, and closed ~10 years ago. All in all it got 5 answers, four times more upvotes than downvotes and was not deleted since then. That gives me the impression the question was actually not too badly perceived by our community.
Note "closed" was the state of the question at the time when I wrote the above paragraph. In between, the question was reopened again in Dec 2024, most probably because this meta question drawed more attention to it.
Thomas already explained why we usually do not answer such questions anymore - at least not today, where a question about a technology choice is often closed immediately as "off topic" - we have a predefined close reason for this. Still, this was not the literal reason for closage in 2014 - the close reason was "opinion-based".
It is not uncommon on this site to find sometimes questions which deal with a software engineering topic, but are likely to encourage a lot of opinionated answers, since there can obviously be no "right" answer. This sometimes turns out just after the question was answered a few times by people givening answers like
"In my opinion, I would use tech 1 for foo, and tech 2 for bar", and a second one
"I would also use tech 2 for foo under the circumstances xy, and a mixture of tech 1 and 2 under circumstance yz", and a third one
*"consider also to use tech 3", and a fourth one
"don't forget about the drawback when mixing tech 1 with 2 in case xyz"
This is the point where either a diamond mod or a group of community members will hopefully close the thread against further answers, because at that point additional answers are unlikely to produce any real insights any more. Still, these Q&As can stay here for years afterwards.
The question in stake is IMHO one of this kind, and there is nothing wrong when it is kept as a closed question (or now as a reopened question). When closing and reopening of an old question happens several times, moderators may put a historical lock on it.