A few suggestions regarding your floor pours:
1. Regarding saw cutting of the control joints, look into the relatively new SoftCut saws. They are small, lightweight saws with 4"-6" blades that can cut the concrete while it is still at initial set. They work great and prevent the early cracking that Ron warned about above.
They are expensive and so are the blades, but it is worth it in quality concrete floors.
2. The pour size depends on your crew size. With the SoftCut saw the days of checkerboard pouring are OVER. I've seen super flat floors poured 12'wide and 300'long and warehouse floors poured in 10,000 sf chunks, but we had the crew to do it! How you pour makes a difference too. Do you plan to truck dump the concrete, buggy it or pump it?
Figure roughly 1,500 to 2,000 sf of floor per cement finisher. Are you using walk behind finishing machines or riders? How flat do you have to finish the floor? You should also take into account overtime for the finishers depending on what admixtures you are allowed or required to use.
Food for thought, good luck.