Originally posted by ejday
However, considering your constant and carefully measured pessimism, we have to wonder a few things:
1.) Does Westlake have exclusive rights to accept this porting job from MacSoft and/or deny that a port can be done by anybody else if they decide to pass on it?
We've placed the first bid on the project, but if MacSoft rejects that, they can certainly look for a bid from someone else. While we've had cases where the publisher has passed on our bids, I don't believe it's happened on a project where we've been familiar with the code, as typically those bids are fairly low considering a lot of the heavy lifting has already been done.
Take a look at the Neverwinter Nights port. MacSoft had contracted with Omni to do the toolset, and it looked like that was going to happen. Then it turns out that the bid Omni did on the toolset was short by *6* months, which (according to what I read on the web) blew MacSoft's budget. Unfortunately, MacSoft had announced that they were looking into doing the NWN toolset and people took this to mean that it was a Sure Thing. Could the sales hit from this affect MacSoft and their budget for other projects? I sure can't say.
/2.) Is Jeff Morris in a position to make such pronouncements.
3.) Was Jeff Morris mistaken or premature? (If so, I'm sure he hates it when that happens)
In a word, "sorta". Firaxis has had a fairly laid-back approach to their Mac ports. They let us do our thing and give us technical help, but they otherwise defer on most of the other Mac issues to MacSoft and ourselves. They tend to keep fairly informed on what happens with the Mac port, and they are quite open to receiving bug fixes that we make in the Mac code. In that respect, they seem fairly in touch with what we're doing on the Mac side, and that puts them ahead of most other PC developers that I've had to deal with.
As for #3, even if Infogrames says the Mac port can go ahead, that's no guarantee that it will. Jeff's info on this is probably as good as mine, which is not that good.

I don't think he (or Firaxis in general) can influence the decision, as typically the rights for Infogrames titles are held by Infogrames. I could be wrong though.
4.) If Infogrames says "go" (and this is assuming a top-down parent company-subsidiary hierarchy), can MacSoft say "no"?
I have no idea. I'm sure that finances play a role in the decision at all the levels, so if it turned out that the cost of a Mac port wouldn't turn anywhere near a profit, they'd have to reconsider and accept a "no" from MacSoft.
Keep in min that this is mainly speculation on my part. I don't work for MacSoft and have no real insights as to their corporate structure, finances or anything else. I'm going strictly on my own common sense and what I've learned in dealing with these projects over the past few years.