Plus AI Feature
Dreading the hours it takes to manually draw system architecture diagrams? Check out these Technology Prompt Ideas for Nano Banana to instantly generate cloud infrastructure layouts, software engineering flows, and detailed technical schemas. Nano Banana Pro is exceptional at rendering text within images, so your labels and annotations will come out sharp and spelled correctly. These are lifesavers for engineering syncs or explaining the "how it works" slide to leadership.
29 prompts

Design a slide presenting the NIST cybersecurity framework with five core functions. Use a cyber defense aesthetic with matrix-style green code rain background, shield and firewall iconography, dark background with electric blue accent glows, hexagonal grid patterns, threat radar graphics, and futuristic tech-noir typography.

Create a technical slide explaining RESTful API concepts with request/response examples. Design in a developer documentation style with syntax-highlighted code blocks on dark background, JSON bracket graphics, HTTP method badges (GET in green, POST in blue), clean Fira Code typography, and subtle connection line animations between endpoints.

Design a circular diagram slide showing SDLC phases from planning to maintenance. Use a modern DevOps style with dark mode background (charcoal gray), neon gradient cycle arrows in cyan and magenta, gear and code bracket icons, terminal-inspired monospace typography, subtle circuit board pattern overlay, and glowing accent effects.

Create a technical slide showing AWS infrastructure with EC2, S3, RDS, and Lambda components. Design in official AWS style with their orange and dark blue color scheme, isometric 3D cloud and server icons, clean connector lines with data flow arrows, white background with subtle grid, and technical monospace fonts for labels.

Design a slide explaining the sprint planning process with user stories and estimation. Use a Kanban board aesthetic with colorful sticky note graphics in yellow, pink, and blue on a cork board texture, handwritten marker-style fonts, push pin accents, to-do checkbox illustrations, and casual startup whiteboard energy with doodle arrows.
How to use these Technology Prompt Ideas for Nano Banana prompts
Welcome to the technical side of the library. This collection focuses on visualizing code structures, IT infrastructure, and those complex systems that are often difficult to explain with words alone. Browse through these examples to see how you can turn a dense architecture spec or a workflow document into a clean, readable diagram right inside your presentation slides. You can copy a prompt that looks close to what you need and simply swap out the specific labels to match your technology stack.
Start by clearly defining the visual style you need for the context of your meeting. Do you need a polished, flat vector illustration for a client pitch deck, or a rough "hand-drawn" whiteboard sketch for an internal engineering sync? Specifying the aesthetic helps the AI pick the right color palette, line weights, and icon styles to match the tone of your presentation.
Take full advantage of Nano Banana Pro's ability to render accurate text. Unlike other tools you might have used in the past, this model is built to handle specific labels, titles, and annotations correctly. Don't be vague; list exactly what you want written on your database icons, server nodes, or flow arrows. You can say things like "label the central server 'Mainframe' and the output 'Analytics Dashboard'" to get precise results.
Give direction on the layout flow to ensure the diagram makes logical sense. Telling the AI to arrange elements from "left to right" for a timeline or in a "hub and spoke" pattern for a network diagram helps structure the image correctly. If you are visualizing a process, specify the start and end points so the visual hierarchy follows the path of your data.
One of the strongest use cases for these prompts is visualizing cloud infrastructure and system architecture. Instead of spending hours dragging boxes around in a separate diagramming tool, you can generate a professional overview of your microservices or server setup directly on the slide. This is perfect for high-level overviews where you need to show stakeholders how different components interact without getting bogged down in the nitty-gritty details.
These prompts also shine when mapping out development workflows and CI/CD pipelines. You can create clear, step-by-step visualizations showing how code moves from a local commit to production deployment. It makes onboarding new engineers significantly faster when they can see the "happy path" of your release process at a glance, complete with readable labels for each stage like "Build," "Test," and "Deploy."
Work directly in Google Slides and PowerPoint — no need to learn a new tool
Never start from scratch again, just tell us what kind of presentation you want to make.
Add, remix, and rewrite your slides to fine-tune your presentation.
If you are presenting technical concepts to non-technical stakeholders, try asking for a "simplified abstraction" or "isometric 3D" style. This helps strip away the complex wiring diagrams and focuses on the high-level logic, which is usually what leadership wants to see anyway.
Use color coding instructions to make your diagrams instantly readable. You can tell Nano Banana to "use blue for all frontend components and orange for backend services." Since the model follows design instructions closely, this creates a visual shorthand that helps your audience distinguish between different parts of your stack without you having to explain it verbally.