Abstract
This work presents the design and prototyping of two reconfigurable BLE-based devices developed to overcome the limitations of commercial platforms in terms of configurability, data transparency, and energy efficiency. The first is a wearable smart wristband integrating inertial and biometric sensors, while the second is a configurable beacon (ASIA Beacon) able to dynamically adjust key transmission parameters such as channel selection and power level. Both devices were engineered with energy-aware components, OTA update support, and flexible 3D-printed enclosures optimized for residential environments. The firmware, developed under Zephyr RTOS, exposes data through standardized interfaces (GATT, MQTT), facilitating their integration into IoT architectures and research-oriented testbeds. Initial experiments carried out in an anechoic chamber demonstrated improved RSSI stability, extended autonomy (up to 4 months for beacons and 3 weeks for the wristband), and reliable real-time data exchange. These results highlight the feasibility and potential of the proposed devices for future deployment in ambient assisted living environments, while the focus of this work remains on the hardware and software development process and its validation.