I remember that old MS-DOS program.
I should still have it somewhere if I can find it.
Back then (early 90's) we had our house setup with a Novell Netware server, we were one of the very few houses in our town with more than one computer in the house (One per family member), and we had a Netware server from the beginning. (Mainly because my father setup the first network at the school my mother worked at using Novell Netware 3.12 so he setup a file server at home for ouur family to use and to help him learn the in's and out's of Netware 3.12, before he tried something new on the school server he would try it on our's first)
It was a big advantage back then because at the time sizable hard drive's were expensive, so we only had small hard drives in our computers (100 - 200Meg at most), and we had a 2 Gig hard drive in the server that cost a mint at the time as it was the biggest hard drive available on the market. (Later years a 3 Gig and then a huge 6 Gig drive was added)
Because everything was centralised it meant that as server upgrade's happened through the years, all the files were migrated, so I still have all the files from that original server, saved on a spot on my current Win 2016 server over 24 years on.
Anyway sorry, I got side tracked there by memories.
Point is if I can find it or remember the name of the program I should be able to get it running in Doxbox or something.
Although the keplerian elements will be long out of date now.
I do remember Dad loading up the program and pointing out when Mir would come overhead and we would go out to watch it, and sometimes Dad would try and make contacts via Amateur radio, sometimes sucessfully making a contact with either Cosmonauts or Astronauts on board via amateur radio for the few minutes it was in view.
I also remember for the same program we downloaded the elements (From a Packet Radio BBS run by a fellow Amateur Operator) to show where to look in the sky for comet Shoemaker-Levi 9 when it was floating around the solar system and heading towards Jupiter before impact.
Oh the memories.
EDIT:
So I couldn't let it go, I found it.
It was called InstantTrack by Paul Williamson KB5MU
Copied it into my Doxbox folder and it still runs.