You missed the point brotatochip; I agreed with you on constant but since you are so inclined, take a seat cuz school is in session!
Your example is from an airbag suspension that is not changing pressure for ride quality through electronics; your example, Captain Obvious, is that of a very basic Electronically Controlled Air Suspension (eCAS). I don't need you to regurgitate what a actual smart guy on the internet is telling us about an airbag that it filled up and raised and lowered and how volume works with pressure or given constant; that guy, unlike you, actually knows what he is talking about and what kind of system he is referencing. Since you obviously have been Googling a bit to prove me wrong, you would notice these eCAS systems have been around since the early 90's and RR actually used the Dunlop eCAS system on their first version RR.
Now, let's roll into this decade since you are clearly still stuck in the early 90's. The current LR and RR change pressure in the bags to control spring rates in the various "special programs" they offer; this is called a "Semi-Active Suspension Control System. A semi-active suspension is generally controlled through switch, a dial, or some sort of manually selected control that tells the computer what setting the user wants and then the computer does it. Similar to the eCAS which changes ride height, the semi-active control uses computer controlled valving to tune the suspension in specific settings to optimize performance for that specific setting or environment. Semi-active suspension controls such as the one in your LR3 allow the user to select what suspension mode they want by turning of the little shiny knob and then, the computers (ECU) set the pressure, volume, and electronic valving to the performance setting that the vehicle is pre-programmed and capable of. So, smart guy, the same exact system that is in your LR3, coincidently enough is also in the same year RR Sport. How does the RR Sport get SPORT MODE you ask? Through the semi-active suspension that JLR installed in both vehicles which allows them to electronically change how they want the suspension to act in a certain mode in a different vehicle. Does the RR Sport have a different suspension, NOPE, but the ECU flash and the hardware (special programs panel,) that allows SPORT MODE are put in that vehicle to work with the other hardware to make SPORT MODE, well, SPORT MODE; don't forget they added those nice and tight bushings in the control arms too. Examples you ask; look at your Special Programs dial on your LR3: SPORT MODE, OFF-ROAD MODE, NORMAL MODE! In the past, these systems operated as a standard eCAS and generally just raised height control of the suspension. Now we have cross-linking, traction control, ABS, and all the other bells and whistles tied into those smart little computers that smart guys like in your video designed to what we call Semi-Active Suspension; and in some cases Stability Control and Augmentation Systems which is something that Ford is planning for in the Bronco. There are lots of little things going on in the background and multiple systems working together to apply more travel here, more compression there, less wheel spin here, brake here, and blah blah blah. These are interfaces that you are clearly not aware of in modern suspension and traction control systems.
Are you still with me young Jedi? A Fully Active Suspension Control System is something that you might find in say a Bugatti, Ferrari, and I don't know Indy Cars, F1 cars. The car's software, hardware are computing in autonomous nature the various readings from the hundreds of sensors placed throughout the vehicle that measure wheel spin, G's, velocity, braking, speed, steering wheel angle, etc and then the computer does its magic and AUTOMATICALLY tunes the suspension without any function of the operator; it uses sensor inputs and outputs, parameters, and then algorithms to pull the rabbit out of the hat. It is said that today's F1 cars and GP bikes are impossible to control without the active suspension and traction controls put in place; all of which the driver/rider has absolutely no control over. However, these active systems are designed to work in unison with the operator so the vehicle's response is that of what the operator desires; hence putting the operator in control with thousands of activities going on in the background.
Cruise control is a form of "Semi-Active Autopilot"; push a button and the computer will maintain what it is told to do at a specific parameter. To change it, you must tell it what to do! Don't forget to steer and brake on your own! Have you heard of "Active Cruise Control"? I'll let you take a stab at that one and see if you can WOW us with your Google Knowledge.
Tesla Autopilot is what you call an "Active Autopilot"; push a button and the computer will actively drive the vehicle with no impute from the operator.
And then there are aircraft "Active Autopilots"; these systems will blow your mind on what they can do and how well they do it in a 3 dimensional environment.
Try finding a better example on your wikipedia and google searches that articulate sound knowledge of how semi-active systems in modern vehicles are actually designed. Just because the dial and name of the special program didn't change, doesn't mean the innovation, software, hardware, and performance interface of the systems didn't change. These Rovers do far more than raise and lower the volume in the bags when you turn that little dial Amigo!
I tried to keeping some of the definitions and explanations in simple terms so I hope I you understand the wave top views of passive and active systems for the rest of the forums you are spitting your knowledge on.
We can elaborate anytime you want to get more into specifics. Try a better Google search next time and read it before you post it!
No hard feelings man; you just make it too easy sometimes!