Your circular saw should be able to cut the 45 degree angle, there should be a lever to allow you to tilt the plate thus tilting the bade. Something like this
Then to get a Straight cut you need a guide along one edge. You need something longer than the piece you are cutting and wide enough to clamp it to it and have enough room to run the saw along the edge for a straight cut. Something like this, although this is a special clamp guide, you could just use something a bit wider with some other clamps.
That blog certainly should have taken down; terrible, dangerous work. First, obviously, providing grounded NEMA 5-15 receptacles when the plug is 1-15. (a water-protected GFCI would eliminate the electrocution hazard at least.) Also the cord is too light, and there's not proper strain relief.
How circuit protection works
Imagine you plug two 1500W (12.5 amp) heaters into a 20A circuit. That's 25A and the wires will slowly overheat. The circuit breaker, internally, will also slowly overheat. After 5-15 minutes, the breaker will trip. This will happen before the wires get dangerously hot -- assuming they are the correct 12 AWG wires!
Trick is, there's an idiom within the Electrical Code that a 15 amp receptacle can be on either a 15A or 20A circuit breaker. You aim to put a NEMA 5-15 plug on the furniture. That means it could be plugged into a 20A circuit. You aim to provide multiple NEMA 5-15 receptacles. So the user (you can't count on this being you) - could plug two 1500W heaters, as above. Or he could plug in two 1200W (10A) loads and the breaker would not trip -- and your cordage needs to handle that!
That means your cordage will need to be 12 AWG, as well as any internal wiring within the furniture. You can use stapled Romex, or THHN running within plastic or metal conduit. The conduit would be more professional IMO.
Correct cordage
The blog example doesn't have a cordage problem, but just for reference, here's what you can't do: use Romex or loose wires. You need special multi-conductor cable called cordage which is sold at electrical supply houses, with or without a NEMA 5-15 connector cast into the end. As he did, you can lop an extension cord (presuming it is listed to be cordage; one would expect!)
Cordage doesn't seem special when half your appliances have cords. But it really is special.
Strain relief
Strain relief is another thing you take for granted because every appliance has it. But it's very important to prevent chafing or cutting damage from the cord being pulled on.
You can see where the blogger is using a cheapie plastic residential junction box. Those boxes aren't strong enough to provide proper strain relief, and are not designed for it. (when I say "cheapie" I mean in construction, not in cost.) A much better choice -- at least, for the first box where the cordage goes in -- is an all-steel stamped box. It has proper knockouts which can accept quality strain reliefs.
GFCI doesn't hurt
I also agree with Ecnerwal's comment that because of the flat horizontal receptacles, the furniture itself should incorporate GFCI protection. It's likely to be plugged into a living room which will have, at most, AFCI protection. AFCI protects against arcs, not electrocutions.
If you have face-up outlets, they should be fed off the LOAD side of a GFCI which is not itself a face-up outlet. A tripped GFCI still has hot parts inside it, and if the GFCI outlet itself gets soaked wet, its protection is not sufficient.
Best Answer
A more typical way to strengthen a miter joint is to use either splines or biscuits. Splines can be oriented in one of two ways. It's probably easier to show pictures than to explain in words:
a) Spline running the entire miter. With this method you can also make the grooves stopped so the spline would not be visible at the edges. If you are working with MDF you can cut the spline so the grain is running the length of the spline, as opposed to the way it is shown in the example.
b) Reinforcing with biscuits. This is similar to (a) except that it requires that you have the biscuit joiner to cut the pockets for the manufactured biscuits. This is definitely the easiest and fastest of these three options.
c) Multiple splines cut through the miter. The third method can be made into a decorative element if the splines are made from a contrasting color of wood.