End-to-End Gemma 2B LoRA Fine-Tuning and Serving on GPU & TPU If you have ever prototyped a Large Language Model (LLM) on your local GPU and then spent days rewriting your code to scale it on a Google Cloud TPU , you know the pain of hardware lock-in. For the Google TPU Sprint, I wanted to build a solution to this exact problem. This project provides a lightweight, end-to-end pipeline for fine-tuning Google's Gemma 2B model using LoRA (Low-Rank Adaptation) and serving it via a custom REST API. By leveraging KerasNLP and the JAX backend, we can write our training and inference code once, and execute it natively on both local NVIDIA GPUs (like the RTX 6000) and Google Cloud TPUs. ⚡ Why the Keras 3 + JAX Stack? Keras 3 was rewritten to act as a "super-connector" that can run on top of PyTorch, TensorFlow, or JAX without changing the code. By explicitly setting our backend to JAX ( os.environ["KERAS_BACKEND"] = "jax"...
Disclaimer: As a Google Developer Expert (GDE), I was incredibly fortunate to be invited by Google DeepMind to test these models internally before their public release. The capabilities I'm sharing today are based on my hands-on early access. Have you ever stared at a dense, 15-page academic paper and wished you could just see what the researchers were talking about? As someone who frequently reads and writes heavy technical research, I face this constantly. Today, Google is introducing Nano Banana 2 (Gemini 3.1 Flash Image) . It is the latest state-of-the-art image model, and it is here to completely change how we interact with complex information. By bringing advanced world knowledge and reasoning to the high-speed Flash lineup, Nano Banana 2 dramatically closes the gap between lightning-fast generation speed and breathtaking visual fidelity. To put this to the test, I took two of my own highly technical research papers, uploaded the PDFs directly into the work...