The advent of the fifth-generation mobile communication network era induces a great potential for the design and development of self-powered wearable electronic devices. Hydrogels, as a typical material for flexible electrodes, have been widely employed in self-powered wearable electronic devices. However, the hydrogel-based triboelectric nanogenerator (H-TENG) is usually compromised by the challenges in data collection, operational stability, and manufacturability due to the unstable combination between the friction layer and the electrode layer, the occurrence of hydrogel damage during prolonged operation, and also the difficulty of machining sticky hydrogel electrodes. In the present study, a composite hydrogel composed of acrylamide, crotonyl alcohol, and 4-carboxyphenylboronic acid was synthesized via ultraviolet crosslinking, which was specially developed for H-TENG and wearable wireless remote control interface, featuring with excellent stretchability and mechanical strength as well as self-healing and self-adhesive properties. The open-circuit voltage of the H-TENG prepared with the hydrogel reached up to 165 V, and the output voltage remained almost unchanged following 10,000 cycles of compression test. Additionally, a wearable wireless remote control system was designed that could accurately control the multiple appliances and adjust different working modes using the H-TENG. Consequently, the development of the H-TENG and wearable wireless remote control system has the potential to provide a new methodology for the application of next-generation wearable devices in various areas, such as smart homes, as a representative example.