Pivoxa15, your definition of compactness is not the most general one. It relies on defining what a bounded set is , which in turn relies on some concept of "size". This is generally done by using norms but sometimes you don't have a norm to work with.
The hierarchy of spaces is as follows: Inner product spaces < Normed Spaces < Metric Spaces < Topological Spaces, where "A<B" means that the type of Spaces "A" induces a type of space B but there are spaces of type B that are not of type A. For example, there is a method to determine if a norm could be generated from an inner product. It is called the "polarization identity". Look it up.
With this in mind, I would say that the problem you posted is not as trivial as saying "it's not bounded" if the definition you are supposed to use is the general one (but still, it's not that much of a difficult problem).