Occasional users, not just newbies, are probably a large part of your user 
base. I'm an occasional user and it's frustrating to use GIMP 2.8.16 on 
openSuse 13.2 Linux (kept evergreen) for an hour and still get nothing done. 
Yet, I propose preserving all of the expert-level capabilities GIMP now offers.
--- I try to get a one-pixel brush or pencil but find out from Googling that 
you disabled that because only scripts should have single-pixel control, so 
that means I'd have to write a script and for that I'd have to learn a 
scripting language just to use GIMP, and that round of single-purpose learning 
probably means hours before I'm productive again.
--- There's no color picker (the kind that shows all of the colors so I can 
click on a colored pixel for exactly the color I want and maybe also see a 
numerical description of its components for future use) obvious in the user 
interface and I have to find and use some color feature that achieves the same 
thing but without seeing all of the colors even if the dialog offers a preview 
and the preview option is checkmarked on, and most color features apparently 
don't support choosing a color from anything like a fully-visual display. If I 
find it, the next time I need it I don't remember where it was and relying on 
the menus to tell me is hopeless. (The kind that shows only 3-6 solid patches 
and tells me to enter numbers for my desired shade is not much use unless I'm 
online using someone else's website to find possible choices.)
--- The color picker tool (the kind that looks like an eye-dipper) was, I 
thought, supposed to work from anywhere on the screen, but it doesn't work 
outside of the possible canvas/layer area, so I can't pick a gray from the GIMP 
icon on a visible desktop panel.
--- I wanted to change a background around black text from white to gray but 
the bucket and the pencil refused except within a selection, so I created a new 
layer, selected all of it, made it gray, and merged the layers, a kludgy 
workaround.
--- One of the commands for layers is in some menu other than the Layer menu, 
so anytime I want some kind of command that I don't see in the obvious place I 
probably search most of the menus for commands in unexpected menus. Many menu 
items are duplicated in a couple of menus, so that could be done with the 
unexpected layer command, if the non-layer menu is also appropriate for some 
reason.
--- Some features are available only through toolboxes and GIMP I think has 
several, but apparently no command opens all of them and they don't open by 
default.
--- I've given up on using the built-in help to refresh myself on basic 
concepts that would lead to menu items and instead have to Google, which means 
I likely can't use GIMP if I can't go online from some building or outside. I 
make kludges but don't always get the designs I want, only compromises. I 
wanted to make a picture frame as if lit from an angle, but settled on an unlit 
frame instead.
Granted that the user interface is going to be designed for efficiency for 
expert users and schools may have classes, but even most of the people who have 
reasons to eventually become experts are first either newbies or occasional 
users. The UI can be designed for both groups of users. This would expand the 
user base and that, in turn, would expand the developer base. While I have not 
attempted using GIMP's main proprietary competitor in years and that was 
version 3, what I see in operating systems is that the market dominator, 
despite its various problems, tends to be relatively friendlier to users and 
that probably helps with market share. I looked at Inkscape but, based on a 
brief time, it wasn't easier to learn and I installed Karbon but it didn't 
launch or appear when it should have, suggesting a technical problem. That 
means there's room for GIMP to be developed for nonexperts without sacrificing 
growth for highly skilled users. While some expert users would be annoyed to 
have the riff-raff or rabble able to use GIMP alongside experts (I've run into 
this with other software), GIMP need not be crippled by adding 
user-friendliness to its technical capacity.
-- 
Nick
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