Saskia Sills

Saskia Sills (born 24 July 1996 in Plymouth) is a world champion British windsurfer and member of the British Sailing Team. She has continued to compete in international events such as the European championships, and has been part of the British Sailing team from 2013 to present as a windsurfer in the RSX (Women) Class which includes a 2.86m board with an 8.5 metre sail.

Debut

Sills started sailing in 2004 at Roadford Lake sailing club. She won the World Championship title at age 13, and continued on to win it again on her 15th birthday. She won it twice when she was aged 16. She also received the Young Sailor of the Year award in 2012 at the London International Boat Show from YJA.[1]

Current campaign

Saskia, and her twin Imogen[2][3] live in Portland where they train at the Weymouth and Portland National Sailing Academy. Saskia is aiming to compete in the Tokyo 2020 Olympics alongside studying for her degree in Geography at Bournemouth University.

Awards

Nominated for BBC Young Sports Personality of the year in 2012, Saskia was chosen for her gold in the ISAF Youth World Championship and at the EUROSAF Youth Europeans, continuing on to claim the under-17 world title at the RSX Open Youth World Championships. She was nominated alongside Olympic and Paralympic medalists for the ISAF Rolex World Sailor of the Year Awards.[4]

Her Bournemouth University awards received include University Colours and a nomination for Sportswoman of the Year.

gollark: It's less complex for everyone interacting with it, since they can just... use SQLite, which has bindings for everything, instead of "zimlib". And by "efficiency" do you mean "space efficiency" or "lookup efficiency"? Because, as I said, SQLite would probably only add a few bytes per directory entry row, which is not a significant increase.
gollark: SQLite's overhead is pretty low, and the majority of the filesize is from the binary blobs which would remain the same in each.
gollark: It's less complex for them as the code is already there and written with a nice API, and "less efficient" how? Slightly more space on headers?
gollark: You could easily store the directory entry bits as an SQLite table.
gollark: This is an excellent use case for SQLite, which would allow quick lookups in the metadata bit and not require coming up with a fiddly custom binary format.

References

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