"The community has really rallied around us, but we've just been in a paused state and there wasn't much we could do.
The Spaniard fought back from two sets down against 14th seed Fils in their second-round match but ultimately fell 7-6 (7-3) 7-6 (7-4) 2-6 0-6 6-4 on Court Suzanne Lenglen.A raucous French crowd offered passionate support to Fils as he battled through a back injury to seal an epic victory after four hours and 25 minutes.
"I'm going to be very clear on the subject and I'm not going to mince my words," Munar said in his post-match news conference."It's fine if they encourage the other player, if they shout, I'm used to it. In South America it's very intense as well."But what I consider a complete lack of respect - and here, it happens often - is that they sing non-stop, they interrupt continuously.
"It's not even a question of emotional or personal impact, it's simply that play cannot go on as normal."Munar had to ask the crowd to be quiet during the final game as he served to stay in the match, having previously been a break up.
Despite struggling to move at one point, Fils brought the crowd to their feet as he completed a miraculous victory, before removing his shirt and lapping up the atmosphere.
"It seems like a great show for the spectators, but you have to remember we're here to do our job," Munar said.The new Google glasses are being developed with eyeglass retailers Warby Parker and Gentle Monster and will feature a camera, microphone, and speakers.
With the renewed effort, Google hopes to compete against Meta's AI-powered glasses made with Ray-Ban.The company said it expected to start building the new product later this year.
Leo Gebbie, principal analyst and director for the Americas at CCS Insight, said Google had been expected to wrap AI more tightly into its products.He said he thought the chatbot would help minimise the number of web pages that users must sift through, while also allowing people to ask more complicated queries.