How Tim Cook Is Remembering Steve Jobs 5 Years Later

It's been five years since Apple co-founder Steve Jobs died, but his legacy is still a huge part of the Apple we see today.

A photograph of Apple co-founder Steve Jobs sits near a candle, an apple and flowers to form a portion of a tribute in front of an Apple store in Boston, Thursday, Oct. 6, 2011.Steven Senne / AP file
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It's been five years since Apple co-founder Steve Jobs died, but his legacy is still a huge part of the Apple we see today.

Apple CEO Tim Cook, who has led the tech giant in the five years since, paid tribute to his friend today on Twitter.

"Most important, have the courage to follow your heart and intuition," he wrote, a famous Jobs quote. "Remembering Steve and the many ways he changed our world."

Apple set up a dedicated page after Jobs' death where everyone who knew or admired him could share their remembrances. Since then, Apple said more than one million people have shared their memories.

A photograph of Apple co-founder Steve Jobs sits near a candle, an apple and flowers to form a portion of a tribute in front of an Apple store in Boston, Thursday, Oct. 6, 2011.Steven Senne / AP file

Cook, who had been the company's chief operating officer, was named chief executive in August 2011 after Jobs resigned and suggested Cook become the new CEO. Jobs died less than two months later after a lengthy battle with a form of pancreatic cancer.

In the five years since Jobs has been gone, Apple has dived into wearables, music streaming and life without a headphone jack.

While Jobs is certainly remembered at Apple, Cook, who spoke at the Utah Tech Tour last week, said he doesn't ask: "What would Steve do?"

Related: A Look Back at the Life of Steve Jobs

"I really want [Jobs'] legacy to be with Apple 10 years from now, a hundred years from now, a thousand years from now," Cook said, according to CNBC. "Not for Apple to be constrained by it. We're not thinking, 'What would Steve do?' We're not thinking that. But we're very much married to his vision of making the best products."

Jobs has left a void in Silicon Valley, where many viewed him as a modern day Thomas Edison. Veteran technology journalist Walt Mossberg tweeted today: "I miss him. The tech industry misses him."