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Rainbow headphones in a forest — built for the long run

Think about the last pair of headphones you threw away.

What was the reason?

The earpads started peeling. The headband cracked. Or — and this one's honest — you just got bored of them.

Whatever the answer, those headphones probably still worked. You just didn't want them anymore.

The Two-Year Upgrade Cycle Nobody Questions

Most people replace their headphones every 18 to 24 months.

Not because the audio fails. Not because the Bluetooth stops working. But because something cosmetic gives out — a flaking earpad, a fraying headband — and suddenly the whole device feels done.

The path of least resistance is to recycle it, or worse, just bin it, and order something new.

We've absorbed this pattern so completely that we don't stop to ask who decided it had to work this way. "Worn out earcup" doesn't logically mean "replace the entire product." It just means you've been trained to think it does.

Fast Fashion Found a New Category

Rainbow headphones outdoors — golden hour, park, lifestyle

Fast fashion has a well-documented playbook.

Design for disposability. Price things low enough that replacement feels easier than repair. Rotate the aesthetic fast enough that last season always looks wrong.

That playbook has migrated into consumer electronics — and headphones are a clean example.

The form factor shifts slightly every cycle. New colorways drop. The old device starts to feel dated even when it still works perfectly. The industry calls this innovation. The result is the same: functional products in landfills, years ahead of schedule.

The most sustainable product isn't the one made from recycled materials. It's the one you actually keep.

Electronic waste is one of the fastest-growing waste streams in the world. Audio gear is a small but consistent part of that. And unlike a worn-out cotton tee, headphones don't biodegrade — they sit in the ground for centuries.

What Actually Wears Out (And What Doesn't)

Here's something the audio industry rarely says out loud: most of the expensive engineering inside a headphone is built to last decades.

The driver — the component that converts electricity into sound — handles millions of hours of use without issue. The Bluetooth chip, the battery management circuit, the touch interface: these fail rarely, and usually much later than people expect.

What wears out first? The soft parts. The earpads. The headband. The outer shell panels.

Rainbow headphones — elegant portrait, modular design built to last

These are, almost by design, the most replaceable components of any headphone. The irony is that most manufacturers build them so they can't be replaced — not without voiding your warranty, hunting down a service center, or watching a repair tutorial that may or may not end in a broken hinge.

That's not an oversight. It's a business model.

The Case for Modular Headphones

This is where modular design stops being a feature and becomes a different philosophy entirely.

Rainbow headphones — side profile, clean and purposeful

Rainbow headphones — made by MONIXIBI — are built on a different assumption: that the parts of a headphone most likely to age should also be the easiest to change.

Earcups rotate off without tools. The headband unclips and snaps back. The outer face cover — the most visible, most expressive part of the design — swaps in and out with a simple turn.

"Almost no two Rainbow headphones look alike."

That's not a marketing line. It's a structural fact. When every part of a headphone is designed to be swapped, you stop being a consumer of a product and start being a steward of a system. One that evolves with you instead of expiring on a schedule.

The Math Is Simpler Than You Think

Let's be concrete about what a ten-year headphone actually costs.

Rainbow starts at $269 — the full device with the modular system built in. Over a decade, assume you replace the earpads twice and the headband once. Existing Rainbow owners pay half price on replacement parts, so you're looking at roughly $30–$60 in total maintenance over ten years.

Now compare that to the two-year replacement cycle. Even at a modest $150 per pair, that's $750 over the same period — plus five discarded devices, five sets of packaging, and five rounds of shipping emissions.

The cheaper option and the more sustainable option turn out to be the same option.

That alignment doesn't happen often. It's worth noticing when it does.

One Device, Two Ways to Wear It

There's a practical dimension to modular design that doesn't get mentioned enough.

Rainbow supports two distinct wearing modes: Semi-Over-Ear for lighter, open days, and full Over-Ear for immersive listening. The difference isn't just ergonomic — it changes how the headphone sounds and how it fits into your day.

Semi-Over-Ear is lighter, more aware of your surroundings. Better for commutes, long walks, or working in a shared space.

Full Over-Ear creates acoustic separation. Better for focus, long sessions, or nights when you want to disappear into an album.

Most people would need two separate pairs of headphones to get this range of experience. With Rainbow, it's one device that adapts.

But Also — Swapping Is Actually Fun

It would be dishonest to make this entirely about duty.

Boredom is a legitimate human experience. You see a new headband colorway and you want it. A limited-edition cover drops and it matches a jacket you just bought. That's not a character flaw — that's having taste.

With a modular headphone, that impulse doesn't have to mean buying a whole new device. It means spending $20 on a new headband and having a headphone that feels brand new by the time your next playlist starts.

Sustainable and interesting don't have to be in conflict. Sometimes the smarter system is also the more enjoyable one.

What You Don't Give Up

Rainbow headphones — confident, bold, no compromises

Sustainable choices often come packaged with a story about sacrifice. You give up quality. You give up style. You give up staying current.

With Rainbow, the trade isn't structured that way.

The audio holds up: 40mm Hi-Fi drivers, Qualcomm 3008 chip, 40+ hours of battery per charge, LDAC and aptX Adaptive support. This isn't a compromise device asking you to accept less sound in exchange for a cleaner conscience.

The style also holds up — because the style changes whenever you want it to. 96,000 combinations of headbands, earcups, and face covers means you're never stuck with the same look twice.

What you trade away is the cycle itself. The replacement. The quiet guilt of throwing away something that still works. That feels like the better end of the deal.

The Ritual Worth Keeping

Rainbow headphones — joyful, colorful, worth keeping

There's something worth naming about the experience of swapping parts yourself.

You chose the component. You installed it in thirty seconds. You know exactly what you spent and why. That's a different relationship with the things you own — more intentional, more present.

The two-year replacement cycle is, by contrast, almost passive. You discard something without fully understanding why. You buy something new without fully knowing what you're getting.

Modular ownership makes the process visible. And visible processes are easier to be deliberate about.

If you're ready to own something built to last — and to evolve — explore Rainbow at monixibi.com.

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Rainbow Acoustic Development Journal - monixibi flagship store

Rainbow 聲學架構開發紀實

重新構想聲音,精進科學。 在Rainbow的聲音設計裡,沒有「標準答案」的概念。只有對聲學本質的深度回應,以及對未來相似方式的重構。 為實現補充臨場選擇感的空間聲學,我們在體與演算法上進行雙軸革新。 Rainbow採用高性能聲學處理晶片,具備專為3D空間聲音優化的演算核心,其空間建模算法能即時調整硬相位差與聲波方向性,重構多維聲場。無論播放多聲道錄音、鄰接音樂,或是空間混音素材,都能呈現出清晰的縱感與方位定位。 我們針對訊號路徑進行了全系統最佳化,拋棄傳統整合式通道設計,改以分段式聲音通道,減少數位訊號號處理(DSP)後的能量損耗。所有資料聲音通道獨立通道處理並在輸出前進行動態去雜訊與增益控制,以聲音動態範圍的完整與真實性。 在電路層面,我們採用多層沉金PCB並整合LDO(Low Dropout)低電位穩壓模組,大幅降低功率元件對電流區域路徑的干擾。另外,關鍵模組以99.99%無銅氧遮蔽殼全封閉處理,有效阻擋外部EMI電磁波幹擾,確保聲音輸出解除幹擾。 為此,我們設計了一種特殊結構的聲學回饋腔體(聲學回饋腔體),使聲波在耦合與耳罩之間獲得精確控制,優化低頻Q值表現,低頻量感與彈性得以共存。 值得一提的是,Rainbow所採用的全包耳與半包耳設計,不僅是穿戴結構的變化,更是響應聲場設計的聲學策略。全包耳版本的腔體體積與密閉性有助於強化低頻回饋與環境藍牙效果,適合沉浸式使用情境;而半包耳版本則減少了空氣的對稱,使中高頻延展更加自然、開放,適合長時間佩戴與日常使用。 我們也思考到聲音的穩定性與續航力的結合。在40小時電力續航設計中,我們引入雙模供電監控與智慧節能曲線,使耳機達到高解析編碼(如LDAC、aptX Adaptive)播放狀態,亦能維持長時間播放不降頻、不中斷。 聲音的絕對好壞,從來無法量化。但我們相信,技術上的極致追求,可以最大化創作者與聽者之間那看似看不見卻絕對存在的感知橋樑。 Rainbow 並不是製造聲音,它只是發出聲音,恢復它原本的樣子。

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耳邊風景,自由續寫——購買 Rainbow,配件專屬五折禮遇

擁有一副 Rainbow 耳機不僅僅是一次性的選擇;它是一種會隨著時間和心情而演變的風格體系。 每一位購買 Rainbow 的使用者,皆可享有 後續配件五折優惠:無論是頭帶、皮套或耳罩,都能用更輕鬆的方式,打造屬於當下的你。 你可以為旅行換上更俐落的搭配、為夏天選擇透氣的配色、或是為禮物準備一組全新組合,讓耳機陪著你一起更新,也成為你送出的心意。 當皮套或頭帶使用久了,也能輕鬆更換,不只延長耳機的使用壽命,也讓它始終保持如新,潔淨如初。更換下來的配件亦可輕鬆用紙巾或濕布擦拭,維護個人衛生與佩戴舒適,是風格與實用並重的日常智慧。 從這一刻起,耳機不再是固定的樣子,而是一種可以一直走下去的風格語言。 不是為了鼓勵擁有更多,而是讓擁有變得更自由。

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您的送禮規劃師

  一場緩慢打開的感知儀式 如果禮物是一種語言,那Rainbow耳機的包裝,就是選擇用低聲細語來說話。 它不是一拆就破、塞滿填充物的那種常見方式。你甚至找不到塑膠封膜的生硬聲響;取而代之的,是有如開啟一本限量書籍般的過程——外層為簡潔硬挺的磁吸式開盒,盒身保留了空白感,就像一句未說完的話,留白之中藏著等待被理解的心意。 打開後,裡面不是單一物件的堆疊,而是一場層層遞進的組裝探索: 頭帶、耳罩、皮套、面蓋,每一個模組各自分開收納,井然有序地安靜躺著。 配件盒下還藏著一封卡片、一條充電線,像是備好的回信與心意備忘。 沒有過多色彩,僅在魔尼帶與耳機上留下微小卻有記憶點的細節。你不會立刻察覺,但它會在使用後的某個日常裡重新被想起。 這不是“高級感”,更準確地說,是一種不急著被理解的沉穩設計。 我們發現:真正會挑禮物的人,不急著用價位與功能說服對方。 他們更在意的是——「這個禮物會不會留下來」,或者,「收到的人會不會記得當時是誰送的」。 所以 Rainbow 不只是耳機,它是一種可以慢慢被打開、甚至可以重新組裝的禮物。 每個模組之間都有磁吸與旋轉卡位的結構,沒有螺絲,也不需工具。 你可以替收禮的人組好一組,也可以選擇讓他們自己動手組裝,體驗一下“收到禮物”之外的“參與感”。 不是所有人都喜歡驚喜,但大多數人會記住被細膩對待的那一刻。 我們一直覺得,最好的包裝,是那種不用強調“適合送禮”的包裝。  你打開它的方式,不會讓人覺得「我收到了一個商品」,而更像是收到了一種心思——就算不說出口,也能被理解的那種。  而你,就是那個讓人感受到這份心思的人。 送什麼不重要,重要的是你選擇用什麼方式讓對方記得你。 Rainbow,一份可以留下來的禮物。也是一場可以打開多次的心情。

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