This document summarizes recent work from the Cremer Lab on superresolution fluorescence microscopy techniques. It discusses: 1) Applications of localization microscopy to image DNA distribution in human cell nuclei at resolutions up to 27,000 DNA sites per square micron and individual human influenza A viruses associated with cell membranes. 2) The 2014 Nobel Prize in Chemistry being awarded to Stefan Hell, a former associate of the Cremer Lab, for his work developing stimulated emission depletion microscopy. 3) Publications from the Cremer Lab in 2014 applying localization microscopy to study chromatin, hepatitis growth factor receptors, and cytomegalovirus proteins.