In my opinion, a big turn-off for newcomers is if their first question is downvoted. Sure, the question they asked may have been poorly formatted and easily answerable by a more experienced developer, but they probably did put thought into the post. They probably just expressed their problem in the wrong way. Seeing the downvote, they jump to the conclusion that they were right and the community was just being unfriendly... and never come back
It is usually nice to comment when you downvote, around 30% of the time. That said, sometimes the posts are so terrible and low effort that you have to downvote.
If we set the reputation limit for giving a downvote to a first post to, say, 750, beyond the reach of site-young users, the downvotes would happen less, as less people would be able to execute them. Plus, by that point the person may have grown a fondness for the site, and a willingness to help it without a reputation incentive of their own.
Some people might argue that the downvote protection from newcomers would result in poorer quality posts, but remember that it is only the first time they are protected. If they continue their behaviours, they will get punished. Furthermore, they can still get marked as a dupe, flagged, etc. just not downvoted. I think their first time should be an opportunity to learn from their mistakes if they post in the wrong way.