Google’s Nano Banana Pro Stuns Internet as Pune Techie Shows It Solving Maths in His Own Handwriting

Google’s Nano Banana Pro Stuns Internet as Pune Techie Shows It Solving Maths in His Own Handwriting

Google’s Nano Banana Pro Stuns Internet as Pune Techie Shows It Solving Maths in His Own Handwriting

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Bananas usually remind us of fruit bowls and smoothie counters, but this story has nothing to do with a grocery list. Instead, the latest buzz in the tech world revolves around Google’s newly upgraded Nano Banana Pro, which has been surprising users with abilities far beyond just generating images. As Google rolls out Nano Banana 2, the successor to the viral Nano Banana AI known for its saree-style image trend, one Pune-based techie has already discovered something remarkable—and the internet can’t stop talking about it.

Pune technologist Siddhant Choudhary posted on X (formerly Twitter) that Google’s AI not only understood a handwritten mathematics problem but also solved it flawlessly and reproduced the solution in handwriting identical to his. Calling it “by far the best image generation AI out there,” he explained that after uploading a picture of an integration question, the system returned a complete solution in what looked exactly like his own handwriting. The split image he shared—showing the original question and the AI-written solution—immediately caught widespread attention.

His post from November 21 quickly gathered likes, views, and a wave of reactions. One of the most astonished users commented, “If it copied your handwriting too, how are you not panicking?” Meanwhile, another person expressed both concern and humor by saying, “Students are going to learn nothing and just let AI finish their homework.” Choudhary responded lightly, remarking that this is probably the direction the future is taking anyway.

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Some took a more philosophical angle. A college graduate reminisced, “I would have loved this during my university days—being able to create my own versions of textbook questions to test whether I was actually understanding anything.” Another person chimed in with a slightly nervous prediction, writing, “Impressive, but educators are in trouble. Homework verification is about to need blockchain-level security.” And someone, still trying to wrap their head around the whole thing, simply asked, “Please tell me you wrote this yourself and not the AI,” prompting Choudhary once again to clarify that the work was entirely AI-generated.

For users who were still skeptical, Choudhary explained that he created the output using Flow, a tool included in the Gemini Ultra subscription. That detail added even more curiosity around how deeply integrated and advanced Google’s AI ecosystem has become.

Google has introduced Nano Banana Pro (Gemini 3 Pro Image) as a highly advanced model for image creation and editing. Built on the capabilities of Gemini 3 Pro, the system blends deep reasoning with substantial real-world knowledge. According to Google, the model can convert handwritten notes into organized diagrams, generate infographics from rough ideas, and produce visuals that carry richer context than those of earlier models. The company emphasized that Nano Banana Pro isn’t just about visually appealing outputs—it’s designed to help users create content that is genuinely useful, precise, and meaningful.

With its ability to interpret handwriting, solve academic problems, and mimic writing styles with unsettling accuracy, Nano Banana Pro is already reshaping conversations about the future of education and creativity. Some fear that such tools could compromise learning, while others argue that students who want to explore, experiment, and understand concepts more deeply will gain a powerful new companion. 

Disclaimer: This article is based on information publicly shared by user Siddhant Choudhary on social media.

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