The interest in organic materials for optoelectronic device applications has undergone explosive growth in the last several years. This growth has been propelled by advances in organic thin films for displays, and for low cost electronic circuits. With a few successful product introductions employing active electronic organic devices, it is possible that the "age of organic optoelectronics" has finally arrived. This talk discusses some of the recent progress in organic device technology, with an eye to the future which may include making active electronic devices with a single molecule. In particular, we discuss extremely high external emission efficiency organic light emitting devices used for displays and lighting applications. Also, similar progress in high bandwidth, high efficiency of organic photodiodes, and efficient thin film photovoltaic cells are discussed. For example, multilayer organic nanostructure photodetectors are found to have very high frequency response with detection sensitivity in the visible spectral range. Finally, we present some new ideas on organic device fabrication enabling patterning of structures on the nanometer scale in both the vertical and horizontal directions.