RaspberryPi.org's official resources, mostly directed at students and teachers, but of very high quality.
Instructables' Raspberry Pi channel. They have A LOT of projects.
Hackaday.io's curated list for Raspberry Pi. You'll actually find a lot more by doing a search for "Raspberry Pi". Not all have instructions, but many are really cool.
Hackster.io's Raspberry Pi hub. They have fewer projects than the previous two but all have instructions and parts required.
Adafruit's Raspberry Pi section is brilliant and full of high quality tutorials. An open search for "Raspberry Pi" brings even more.
Makerspace's Raspberry Pi section, although the quality isn't as good as the previous sites.
You can run a YouTube search for Raspberry Pi (If you do this regularly you will want to sort by date uploaded). This will turn up a lot of breadboard experiments, including hooking up an LCD Screen. Be sure to check the comments section for build details.
You can subscribe to the Raspberry Pi sub Redddit. Anything new an interesting will surely show up there.
You can check out Mag Pi magazine. they have a few build and coding tutorials.
You can also browse the Raspberry Pi forums, especially the projects section, and the Projects, Guides & Tutorials section of the R-Pi Hub at elinux.
You can search github and github gists for Raspberry Pi.
You can subscribe to tumblr's raspberry pi tag.
You can also set up a Google alert to email you once a day with a list of resources the Googlebot has found while indexing the web.
You can also join the Raspberry Pi community on Google+.
You can like the Raspberry Pi Facebook page.
You can search for Raspberry Pi on Pinterest
Finally you can check out the Raspberry Pi User Guide that was recently announced.
You can run a YouTube search for Raspberry Pi (If you do this regularly you will want to sort by date uploaded). This will turn up a lot of breadboard experiments, including hooking up an LCD Screen. Be sure to check the comments section for build details.
You can subscribe to the Raspberry Pi sub Redddit. Anything new an interesting will surely show up there.
You can check out Mag Pi magazine. they have a few build and coding tutorials.
You can also browse the Raspberry Pi forums, especially the projects section, and the Projects, Guides & Tutorials section of the R-Pi Hub at elinux.
You can search github and github gists for Raspberry Pi.
You can subscribe to tumblr's raspberry pi tag.
You can also set up a Google alert to email you once a day with a list of resources the Googlebot has found while indexing the web.
You can also join the Raspberry Pi community on Google+.
You can like the Raspberry Pi Facebook page.
You can search for Raspberry Pi on Pinterest
Finally you can check out the Raspberry Pi User Guide that was recently announced.