I agree with much of what's said here, but my nature is to be the devil's advocate...
So, we dont always know what the "design life" of a part/assembly is, or even the design life of the vehicle as a whole. So, what even is the design life span of a vehicle? Some quick Google, says 5 "blocks" of 30,000 miles. Any typical components are designs to have a life span of 150,000 miles or 8-12 years.
So, if the design life is 150k miles/8 years (we will never know, im sure that proprietary info), a touch screen failing at 200k isnt a failure (or a starter, transmission, u-joint, or whatever), its an "end of useful life" issue. Dont have to like it, its just how all design works; someone sets a project scope and spec, then designers design to meet that spec/scope; NOT design the best thing possible.
Reason I bring this up, can you design a bridge that can take 5 million pounds, sure, but if the design is for 1 million pounds live load, and it fails at 2.5m, dont blame the designers, blame the spec/scope team. With that, that bridge is designed for a 50-75 year life span, generally, (with periodic repairs, maintenance, rehab). So, if a bridge from 1950 is failing, the designers did their job.