Today marks fourteen years since Steve Jobs died at his Palo Alto home at the age of 56. He died one day after Apple unveiled the iPhone 4S and Siri. You see his influence every time you unlock an iPhone or open a Mac. The products still carry the ambition he set.
A Legacy That Still Shapes Apple
Apple CEO Tim Cook paid tribute with a message on X: “Steve saw the future as a bright and boundless place, lit the path forward, and inspired us to follow. We miss you, my friend.” You can feel that north star in Apple’s decisions, from hardware design to services.
Cook also reflected on Jobs while opening Apple’s first event at the Steve Jobs Theater in 2017. He said, “There is not a day that goes by that we don’t think about him.” Apple introduced the iPhone X that day, a bold step that echoed the original iPhone launch in 2007.
Preserving His Words, Extending His Reach
The Steve Jobs Archive collects his speeches, emails, photos, and videos, and funds fellowships for young creators. If you want to study his approach, you can start there. Apple also maintains its “Remembering Steve” page where people shared condolences and memories after his death in 2011.
Jobs understood time. In his 2005 Stanford commencement address, he urged graduates to live with urgency: remember that life ends, and act with purpose. That clarity shaped his final years and still guides how you can weigh what matters.
The Final Day, The Enduring Lesson
According to the Santa Clara County Public Health Department, Jobs died at around 3 p.m. on October 5, 2011. The immediate cause was respiratory arrest, with metastatic pancreatic neuroendocrine tumor as the underlying cause.
Laurene Powell Jobs said in a statement that he died peacefully, surrounded by family. She thanked people for their prayers and asked for privacy. You don’t need to stretch to see why his legacy endures. He demanded clarity, simplicity, and focus. Apple still builds on that foundation.
So many lies have been written and only a couple people know the truth and so many people have the wrong perception of a brilliant man so I guess we can’t deny the perception, but it’s still wrong.
He loved me and I love him and I miss him every day and it’s not just one day a year on the anniversary of his death or the birth.
There’s so many lies written about him and I wish I could correct them, but I can’t. People are gonna believe what they believe even with the books that are written so much is not true.
You had to know him closely to understand him and accept him and nobody really meant when he said any type of words and so many did not. He was the greatest and the smartest and the most misunderstood person ever he was great.