Well, I guess you could either claim YOUTH or SENILITY on that one WA4JR!
If you claim YOUTH....then you'll never have experienced automotive tube-type tires with wide white-walls that consistently required checking tire pressures and places that sold real gasoline (not condensed aromatic vapors preserved with phenolic resins) called "Service Stations" where slender men in uniforms greeted you at your car to take your fuel order (You want Regular? or Ethyl?), check your non-maintenance-free battery water-level, non-reservoir type radiator, fan/generator/water-pump V-belts, motor-oil level(Detergent? or non-Detergent?), and clean all your non-tempered "safety-glass" windows for free! Then as the fuel was still being dispensed they'd check your tire pressures because all natural rubber inner-tubes slowly leak air. We always paid with cash (silver certificates at that!)
Now days, tubeless tires with inner liners of synthetic material, installed in sealed "safety-rimmed" wheels have made air pressure loss such a slow process that most people never even think about tire pressures until it's time to go back to WalMart and buy another set. (Or else they're suffering from SENILITY and can't remember either example.)

Because of the split wheels common on aircraft, the tube-type tires have continued in use in this industry. (Tubless tires are used on larger aircraft which also have sealed wheels and fusible plugs that automatically deflate the tires when the brakes are overheated by these new-generation "flight-deck crewmember" graduates of flight "academies" that are hired straight into airline jobs that don't require them to know much about airmanship or anything about real aeroplanes or tire/wheel maintenance, because the operator has "outsourced" maintenance and pre-flight duties to sub-contractors.) But things have improved so much now that we don't have hot meals prepared by onboard flight-chefs and served by pretty stewardesses, and men no longer travel wearing coats or ties, and women no longer wear dresses, hats, and nylons with seams. Now our fellow travellers resemble homeless vagrants and travel wearing torn blue-jeans or cut-off shorts, flip-flops and backpacks. We also must buy seperate tickets when travelling on seperate airlines, and shop/sort through a bizarre non-refundable pricing-scheme instead of only one simple, competitively-priced ticket which all airlines accept. And we must not pay for it with cash lest we be arrested. We must identify ourselves, and pay for it, with a sharp-edged weapon known as a credit-card, and we must show up two hours in advance to be kept in a "holding pen" instead of simply walking out on the ramp and up the airstairs to sit down and relax our heads against starched-white headrest coverlets for a complimentary beverage while we watch big starting-clouds of blue smoke blown away by huge propellers.
And that's the price we pay for spark plugs that last 100K miles and cars that go twice that far, instead of being worn out at 75K like in 1959.
It's also likely that you're filling your tires with common compressed air which contains lots of random-sized molecules of various gases such as oxygen, carbon dioxide, argon, radon, helium, hydrogen, etc, etc. which due to their small size more easily escape through the molecules of rubber which make up the inner tube, as well as water vapor which expands when hot due to recent compression from your air-compressor (giving you a falsely high reading) and later contracts when sitting in the hangar giving you a deflated tire, or it's sensitive to ambient air temperature misleading your tire-pressure measurements, or it's dispensed as water droplets into the tube which take up space and don't escape as easily until later heated into vapor again. The result is a more pronounced loss of air pressure some time later. Most larger aircraft fill their tires with stable, dry nitrogen from bottles which has regular, predictable molecule size and also reduces damage from oxidation and does not cause varying pressures from moisture/water vapor. (That last can also condense and freeze into ice at altitude and cut the tire liner and also turn to steam upon landing causing rapid pressure build-up and blow the tire or fusible plug.)
Go ahead. Ask something else.
