"I agree with the view that Rybka's main strength is in its fast well aimed search. Like you I have come to realise that search is king in the land of chess computers once a reasonable level of eval has been reached. (Warning this does not necessarily apply against humans)"
Where as Anthony Cozzie had this to say:"Sadly, the breakthroughs in computer chess have mainly come from improvements to the search, whereas the eval improvements have been a more gradual creep."
you are caught in the trap of "evaluation = position", "search = tactics". Evaluation can see tactics and search can see positional moves.
And Rolf has this to say on this site:So I really think search and evaluation are simply different options to try to improve play. Obviously I think eval works better while Vasik thinks search works better. So far in Mexico things are proving to be more or less a tossup
http://www.talkchess.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=16717
I don't know about you, but I think it will be great to hear what Vas has to say on this topic once the match is over today. Even if this match does not prove anything I give a small edge to search here. Hey Dr. Hyatt if you are listening, would like to get your thoughts on this.With respect I must disagree. What the author of Zappa doesnt see is that he's caught in a lingual trap. If a program would evaluate the deep positions carefully and exactly enough it had no horizon limitation. I think one cannot argue that Rybka has a "better" search and Zappa the "better" evaluation, no, if the search is well, it's because the evaluation is also well.
Thanks in Advance
For Complete Context see link below:
http://www.hiarcs.net/forums/viewtopic. ... &start=105

