The correct answer is... (drum roll, please)... BOTH.
That bulb is commonly (and correctly) referred to as a "Halogen" type, due to the inert gas used to fill the envelope (glass tube). By comparison, a conventional incandescent lightbulb uses an evacuated envelope (i.e., a vacuum instead of an inert gas). Note that in BOTH cases, the filament inside the envelope is indeed made of Tungsten; so that term is not determinative.
Yes, especially if it has been operated off a dimmer. While I doubt that the case here, there COULD be reasons why, from the bulb's perspective, it has "seen" effectively the same thing.
In "normal" operation, a halogen bulb burns SO hot that it actually starts "boiling off" atoms from the filament material. These stray atoms float around in the inert gas, cool down, and are eventually attracted back to the filament via molecular attraction/bonding (I'm a little weak on the precise chemistry; but that's the gist of it).
However, when run off a dimmer control, the bulb burns significantly cooler; so this molecular redeposition process (which halogen bulbs
need to provide their full expected lifespan) does not work as efficiently. Instead of landing back on the filament, those "stray" atoms of tungsten wind up coating the interior surface of the envelope. This does two things, both of them bad:
1. - That micro-thin film of tungsten on the envelope partially blocks the light from passing through the glass and out into the world. If you closely examine the bulb with the power off, you may discern a subtle darkening of the glass tube, as compared to a brand new bulb of the same type.
2. - The filament itself, being starved of the aforementioned material replenishment, gradually becomes thinner and thinner (it also becomes weaker; and when it gets TOO weak, it pops). This thinning down of the filament increases its resistance. More resistance == less current flow; and so the bulb burns dimmer for that reason, as well.
Now, as for
WHY the bulb in that fixture might be showing signs of this phenomenon... I would look to the photocell/control circuit of the fixture it is installed in. If it uses a mechanical relay to switch the lamp on and off, the contacts on that relay could have become pitted and/or oxidized, which will of course limit current flow just like a dimmer would. If OTOH, it uses some sort of sold-state relay, it is (remotely) possible that it is no longer providing full voltage at its output, due to some sort of internal failure/degradation (I view this as unlikely, but not impossible).
Yet another reason to suspect the control circuit.