Apple’s new iPhones don’t look a whole lot different from last year’s models, but the iPhone 6s and 6s Plus have a next-generation multi-touch display that Cupertino expects will change the way you use a touchscreen.

Apple CEO Tim Cook said the iPhone 6 is the company’s most successful iPhone ever. How to top that? Well, the 4.7-inch iPhone 6s and 5.5-inch iPhone 6s Plus will have 3D Touch displays that are similar to the Apple Watch’s Force Touch. A press will now unlock shortcuts in the apps you use every day, like Messages, Mail, Instagram, and more.

When you lightly press on an app on your home screen, a short list of shortcuts will pop up. For instance, using force touch on the camera icon will pop up a selfie shortcut. Facebook is using the feature to let you check in to a place or post a new status straight from your home screen.

Within an app, a light press will give you a preview of content you’re trying to see without opening it, like an email or a photo. You can also preview web links, an address in Maps, or a calendar view from a day and time without actually launching Safari, Maps, or Calendar. This quick look feature will drastically reduce the time spent switching between apps, although iOS 9 also has a new app-switching feature that makes it simple to get back to the app you were in.

Apple calls these new gestures “peek and pop” and “quick actions.”

The iPhone’s camera system is getting an overhaul that includes a 12-megapixel rear camera sensor, a 5-megapixel FaceTime camera with Retina flash for low-light selfies, and support for 4K video-recording. Schiller promised the new camera sensors won’t degrade your photos’ image quality.

One of the coolest new iPhone features is Live Photos, which some have compared to animated GIFs, but are really so much more. When you take a photo with the 6s or 6s Plus, the iPhone camera will also capture the moments before and after that still image was taken. When you press on the photo, you’ll be able to see those few seconds, which will make your images seem alive—more like cinemagraphs than GIFs. And, of course, you’ll be able to use those Live Photos as your Apple Watch face with watchOS 2.

Macworld