I love the 2 minute exposure. The ISS goes a long way in that time, doesn't it?
I've been fascinated with the ISS ever since I caught it accidentally on the edge of a sunset time lapse I was doing. I thought it was a police helicopter with a searchlight or something (I guess that would be called paranoia?). It went straight overhead and was really bright. My camera was pointed in the wrong direction for most of the pass, but it did catch it at the extreme left of the frame as it just came into view.
I looked up the ISS and found this web site:
http://www.heavens-above.com/You can register your location, and then re-login every time. It has the times and directions of the ISS passes, as well as info about planets and other satellites. Anyway, I used it to predict where the ISS was going to be, and set up 3 cameras to catch it. It appeared on all 3.
I made a video beginning with the accidental ISS pass, and then showing all 3 cameras on the planned pass. Look to the extreme left where it starts to get dark a little above the horizon, at the start of the video. The ISS starts out going almost straight up.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4rZJ1teTxUY#ws